A 10-year-old Colorado girl making up to $250 per day selling cookies in her neighborhood had her business crumbled by neighbors concerned the homemade goods were bringing in too much traffic.

Savannah Watters had set up shop on a street corner for five weeks in her Cedar Falls neighborhood until neighbors called the cops on her — three times.

“No one had talked to me about anything, they just took it upon themselves and called 911,” Kara Watters, Savannah’s mother, told The Courier.

“The police show up to talk to my daughter.”

The callers said Savannah had been selling the cookies without an adult present and complained that her business was creating dangerous traffic conditions.

Neighbor Melissa Winberg says she called the police after a car, using her driveway to turn around, nearly slammed into her daughter.

“We’ve had too many people coming in that we don’t know,” Winberg said. “My daughter was in our driveway riding her bike, and a car pulled in and almost hit her.”

Winberg says she started using her car to block her driveway from other motorists. But she said her maneuver still didn’t make the street safer.

“We had three semis, a dump truck and four cars parked along the road,” Winberg said

Cedar Falls public safety director Jeff Olson says he had to tell Savannah to move a few feet away from the curb. After fielding all of the complaints, Savannah moved her cookie cart to her own driveway.

“I enjoyed it a lot, so then I wanted to have a cookie shop with my mom ’cause it’s always been my dream to do that,” Savannah said of her small business. Savannah’s mom used to be a professional baker and helped her daughter make the cookies.

“I just wish that I could’ve just kept staying there,” Savannah said. Business was so great, Savannah began handing out order forms and business cards to her customers. She used her money from the cookie sales to buy clothing for school.

Savannah is still taking orders from her driveway, but her mom is worried that her daughter’s business is taking a hit.

“She’s trying to figure out how she can keep it going,” Kara Watters said. “She just wants her customers to know.”

Winberg says the family shouldn’t be short of options for selling cookies.

“To be honest, if her mom wants to open a cookie shop, there are other ways of doing it than making her 10-year-old daughter sit on the corner for seven hours a day,” she said.