
Addison Road Community Centre “strikes a blow for goodness” during lockdown crisis

Image: Juliana Jamaluddin, Addi Road Board member; Olivia Wilson-Zarganis, Inner West Multicultural Network Community Project Officer; Rosanna Barbero, Addi Road CEO. Photo: supplied.
By EVA BAXTER
Addison Road Community Centre is a small community organisation churning out thousands of food hampers.
Addi Road is a food aid organisation and a community development organisation, which means its business is in demand during a crisis.
Within a few months of COVID disrupting life in Sydney, the organisation went from working with around 10 or 12 organisations to over 60.
Addison Road has seen a 20% rise in demand every week since the beginning of the lockdown this year, and the centre is almost bursting at the seams.
“We’re in week 5 now, so that’s about a 100% increase in the number of people that are requesting food,” Rosanna Barbero CEO of Addi Road told the Independent.
“That’s alarming because most of those people are people that have not come to us previously for food, so these are the people that are now suffering, those that have lost their jobs, those that have been stood down.
“Even without government support, we’re making things happen,” said Barbero.
Barbero worked for Oxfam in Cambodia during SARS and understood immediately the impact that COVID was going to have.
She knew that many other charities would close, leaving thousands of people in immediate and urgent need. She knew that people would be laid off, casual work would cease, and that many people have limited to no savings, so she set up a food hamper crisis relief centre.
