Brooke Lehmann felt apprehensive as she stepped into the classroom. It was empty except for a girl in a red sweater, who sat at one of the desks, smiling radiantly.
Several hours earlier, Lehmann had received the call. “They said she was suicidal, homicidal and actively psychotic,” Lehmann recalled. “And she was all of those things, but there was just something about her.”
Today, Lehmann is a clinical social worker, lawyer and federal lobbyist who teaches at the University of Virginia’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy. But when she first met Tonia (whose name has been changed for confidentiality), Lehmann was one of several clinicians employed by Georgetown University Hospital who treated children at a nearby middle school – some days, out of an unconventional venue.
“We were literally in a van,” she said. If no rooms inside the school were available, Lehmann saw students in the van’s cramped exam rooms. That experience, among many others, would later inspire her to advocate for school-based health centers.

