Thank you, John, and again, welcome to Franklin Street Properties third-quarter 2023 earnings call. As the fourth quarter of 2023 begins, we continue to believe that the current price of our common stock does not accurately reflect the value of our underlying real estate assets. We will seek to increase shareholder value by continuing to, number one, pursue the sale of select properties where we believe that shorter-term valuation potential has been reached, and two, strive to increase occupancy through the leasing of vacant space. We intend to use proceeds from property dispositions, primarily for continued debt reduction. On last quarter's earnings call, that is for the second quarter of 2023, I talked about, among other things, the metric of price per square foot in considering the potential value proposition of an investment in Franklin Street Properties. And while there are a number of other valid metrics that can be used to try to determine value at FSP, price per square foot is one that we believe is particularly relevant to our specific property portfolio. Last quarter, we said that as of December of 2020, we're willing to start our current property disposition plan. We had sold approximately $852 million of property, representing about 3.85 million square feet, which equated to an approximately $220 per square foot average price. To update those metrics to today with the completed sales of Forest Park and post third quarter One Legacy, we have now sold approximately $909 million of property, representing about 4.1 million square feet, which still equates to an approximately $220 per square foot average price, and anticipated future property dispositions that we believe are likely to occur during the balance of this year. We actually have a slightly higher average price per square foot than $220. My point is that this average price per square foot metric for FSP's properties is one -- which has been tested and has been fairly consistent in a generally very challenged commercial office property market. And while we can't give assurances as to what any individual property will sell for in the future, we continue to believe that price per square foot is one interesting and valid metric to help measure value at FSP. Taking this average price per square foot metric and relating it to our remaining debt is interesting as one view and only one view of a loan to value calculation and potential leverage risk. We have our end of third quarter approximate debt level of about $400 million against approximately 6.2 million square feet of property portfolio, which equates to about $65 of debt per square foot. If you believe that $6.2 million remaining square feet of property in the FSP portfolio would continue to reflect an average of $220 per square foot of value, then total FSP debt at the end of the third quarter would reflect about a 30% loan to value relationship. If you consider the post third quarter completed sale of One Legacy for $48 million gross proceeds and anticipated additional disposition proceeds from further potential property sales during the balance of this year, with the majority of those proceeds primarily used for further debt reduction, then the percentage loan to value metric is likely to fall significantly lower than 30%. Again, we intend to continue to use proceeds from further property dispositions, primarily for continued debt reduction. Since the beginning of our recent disposition program through the third quarter of 2023, we have repaid approximately 60% of our debt, which we believe has reduced risk to all FSP's stakeholders in this currently challenged office property market while increasing the quality and longer-term potential of their continued investment. With the recent sale of One Legacy and anticipated future dispositions this year, we believe we are likely to continue repayment of our total debt down further to between $300 million and $220 million, down 70% to 78% from its former maximum amount of approximately $1 billion. Now for more color on our leasing activity, I will turn the call over to John Donahue, President of FSP Property Management Corp. John?