After all the warnings about junk food causing childhood obesity and all the changes to school cafeteria menus, this news may come as a complete surprise.

"Decisions about vending in our schools are made based on financial gains rather than nutrition," said Pamela Santucci. 

Santucci, who works for the Florida Department of Health, said she was outraged while reviewing vending policies in Broward and Miami-Dade Public Schools she was outraged. 

"It's a conflict when we're teaching children you have to eat right but yet these children have access to these unhealthy snacks during the school day," Santucci told Local 10's Sasha Andrade. 

Santucci started her own company called Fresh Healthy Vending. The machines only serve healthy food.  So far, they've been a huge hit at places like Temple Sinai of North Dade Reform. 

"The food is amazing," said student athlete Alexandra Behar. "I don't taste the difference between regular junk food and the vending machine food."

Keeping kids healthy is a mission Rabbi David N. Young is passionate about.  He's lost 75 pounds over the last 12 months. And he wants his students to learn how to eat healthy too.

"When they're in our walls, we are responsible for what they put in their bodies," Young said.