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22 September 2025
On World Car Free Day, we salute the team that keeps on trucking. Literally.
While many are leaving their cars at home for World Car Free Day today, the CSI Logistics team is doing what they do best, hitting the road to deliver essential supplies to Correctional Centres across NSW.
It’s no small feat. Each year, CSI Logistics moves more than 120,000 pallets of goods to 29 Correctional Centres, clocking up over two million kilometres across a fleet of 25 specialised vehicles. That includes heavy regulated trucks, pallet fridge trucks, tautliners, and hybrid fridge trucks.
From metro to regional and even interstate routes, CSI delivers daily, even today.
And it’s not just boxes and pallets. The CSI Logistics fleet transports a wide range of freight across NSW, from cartons and large parcels to chilled and frozen foods requiring temperature-controlled delivery. Their general freight includes clothing, cleaning products, and furniture, while specialised loads can involve machinery, fence panels, and other sensitive items. It’s a complex operation that runs quietly in the background, ensuring Correctional Centres receive what they need, when they need it - even on Car Free Day.
Behind the wheel and behind the scenes, the team works alongside people in custody at strategically located warehouses. The main logistics hub is based at Francis Greenway Complex in Berkshire Park, with additional sites at Silverwater and Long Bay Correctional Complexes.
People in custody gain hands-on experience in:
It’s real-world training in a real-world environment, building skills that matter.
So, if you're travelling anywhere across NSW today - north, south, east or west - keep an eye out for one of our CSI trucks on the move!
Visit CSI Logistics to learn more about the work and education program within Corrective Services NSW
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We acknowledge Aboriginal people as the First Nations Peoples of NSW and pay our respects to Elders past, present, and future.
Informed by lessons of the past, Department of Communities and Justice is improving how we work with Aboriginal people and communities. We listen and learn from the knowledge, strength and resilience of Stolen Generations Survivors, Aboriginal Elders and Aboriginal communities.
You can access our apology to the Stolen Generations.