Thank you, Dan. Good morning, everyone. As we’ve mentioned before, our revenues and margin vary significantly from quarter-to-quarter based on the timing of customer deliveries. So it's not surprising or unusual to have a great quarter like we did in the fourth quarter of 2021 to be followed by a more subdued quarter like the one we saw in the first quarter of 2022. And whether the quarter has been great or subdued, we say the same thing in each and every earnings call. Because of the lumpiness in our revenue recognition, what matters most is the annual not quarterly performance. Again, there are two factors to play -- at play here. First, nearly all of our customers are under multiyear purchase contracts that come with an annual purchase obligation, not a quarterly obligation. That customer then chooses which quarter to take their delivery, and we book that revenue in that quarter. Second, the prices in our sales contract vary significantly based on when they were signed. Published price indicators for enrichment peaked around $165 per SWU pre-Fukushima and then turnaround and declined to below $40 by late 2018. And then we begin a slow but steady rise to around $60 per so prior to the Ukraine invasion. So we’ve contracts in our order book that were signed up and down that price curve. In any quarter, we can have a lot of deliveries or very few, and those deliveries can be relatively high priced or relatively lower priced. In the first 3 months of this year, we had fewer deliveries. That’s exactly what we expected for the quarter. For the quarter, our overall gross profit was $6.3 million, down from $11.7 million in the first quarter of 2021. We’ve continued to focus on driving down overhead expenses, achieving a reduction of almost 10% in SG&A compared to the first quarter of 2021. Overall, for the quarter, we had a net loss of about $400,000. For the 3 months ended March 31, our total revenue was $35.3 million split roughly between our two business segments evenly. In our LEU segment, the volume of SWU saw decline in average prices in the deliveries decline compared to the same quarter in 2021, but there was also a decline in our unit cost per SWU. In addition to SWU, we had a $4.9 million uranium sale during the first quarter of this year, whereas we didn't have any uranium sales in the first quarter of 2021. Overall, we earned a gross profit of $2.9 million in our LEU segment for the quarter. In our Centrus Technical Solutions segment, our revenues increased by about $100,000. Our cost of sales declined by $4.3 million compared to the first quarter of 2021, due in part to a $1.6 million refund from the DOE and some of our costs. As a result, we had a gross profit of $3.4 million in the first 3 months of this year compared to a loss in that segment of about $1 million in Q1 of 2021. Combining the two segments, we earned a gross profit of $6.3 million. On our last earnings call, we reported a tremendous improvement in the funding status of our legacy pension plan. As you will recall, we reduced our net pension liability to just $23 million by the end of 2021, which was an improvement of more than $100 million compared to our $124 million liability at the end of 2020. That was primarily driven by the strong growth in our pension assets, combined with the impact of the $43 million settlement we secured last year with the U.S. government that reduced our long-term liabilities for pension and postretirement benefits. The good news is that even though equity markets declined significantly in the first quarter of 2022, the losses in the pension assets were more than offset by the impact of rising interest rates, which further reduced our pension liability. The net result was continued improvement with our net pension liability declining to $19.6 million as of March 31, 2022. We are in a strong financial position going forward with a cash balance of $168.5 million and a healthy balance sheet as we head -- as we end the quarter. Our long-term order book was valued at about $1 billion as of March 31. With that, let me turn things back over to Dan.