CRESCENT CITY, Calif. – Officials in Del Norte County don’t like that students prefer Silly Suzie’s food truck over Michelle Obama’s lunches, and they looking to run Suzie out of business.

A majority of board members in the Del Norte County Unified School District voted to ban mobile food trucks from operating near schools during school hours, though the move essentially targets only one business – Silly Suzie’s ice cream truck, The Triplicate reports.

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The decision comes at the request of the local Community Food Council, which sent a letter to the county Board of Supervisors complaining that the business doesn’t jibe with the “healthy” regulations imposed on schools by the federal government through the National School Lunch Program.

In the letter, the Council wrote that “a mobile vending van is undermining the school and community efforts to encourage healthy eating.

“Every day the van parks on the far side of the high school parking lot and sells chips, candy, sodas and energy drinks. Students must cross an active parking lot and public street to reach it and the long line leaves students waiting in or near the street,” the letter read, according to The Triplicate.

Yet despite the Council’s admission that Silly Suzie’s operates legally, it believes that county officials should force the truck to move elsewhere because food it serves doesn’t comply with federal school food regulations championed by first lady Michelle Obama. Those federal food restrictions on calories, fat, sugar, sodium and other nutritional elements have convinced more than 1.2 million students to drop out of the National School Lunch Program since they were implemented in 2012. They’ve also created massive food waste because of a requirement that all students take a fruit or vegetable, whether they eat it or not.

The demand to take action against Silly Suzie’s is also complicated by the fact that Del Norte High School is an open campus, and students can simply walk to the gas station for junk food if Suzie’s goes away.

Teachers told trustees banning the food truck won’t keep students from avoiding Michelle Obama’s “healthy” lunches.

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“My concerns is once you take (the ice cream truck) away, you’re just going to have kids walking to the gas station,” math teacher Dave Bokor said. “If the true concern of the board is that they’re getting unhealthy food at these locations, you have to close campus. I don’t know what the concern is.”

The Board of Supervisors requested that the school board weigh in on the issue before moving forward, and the recent vote affirms the school district’s support, though not all board members agreed with the idea, according to the news site.

School board trustees Angela Greenough and Jamie Forkner didn’t think it was right for the county to target a single business.

“That’s the reason this policy will be create is for one particular vendor,” Greenough told The Triplicate. “It’s targeting one particular vendor, and that is the reason I would have to completely say no, I do not want the school district to have open conversations with the county on this.”

County supervisor Roger Gitlin is on the same page. He told The Triplicate that there’s no good reason to target a legitimate business and doesn’t believe it will change students’ eating habits if they do.

“He pays DMV fees, he puts gas in his car, he supports a family,” Gitlin said. “He’s not selling liquor, he’s selling treats, which, frankly, I grew up on.

“Be careful of the slippery slope that you’re on when you’re telling near-adult-aged children what they can and cannot do; it may backfire on you.”

Despite the many concerns, three school trustees voted in favor of banning the food truck, overriding Greenough and Forkner.

County officials are now researching ordinances to determine how to force the truck away from the school, and will present a proposal to county supervisors for review, county administrative officer Jay Sarina told The Triplicate.