Thanks, Judd. Thanks, everyone, for being here. We probably have a record attendance for this call. So I'm really -- I'm excited about the update. Let me start with the announcement that we made just after the market closed today, which for us is incredibly exciting and encouraging. As Judd mentioned, at the end of January, we had a robustly oversubscribed offering. We had tremendous quality of institutional investors. He named a few, Hood River, MA Capital, Gratia. I mean the list continues on down to a solid 25, 30 institutions that joined. What was even more encouraging was Steve Pei, Gratia, Craig and Mike Kaufman, the interest that was taken in the company is very, very high, including site visits, including reviews and tours of all of our assets and quite frankly, extremely constructive engagement about support and help for how do we position this company to be a truly global, truly dominant, metal recycling company. I think that reflects a view that our technology is differentiated. I think it reflects a view that we have a really, really early adopter head start. I think it reflects a view that we did make good progress with this balance sheet. If you go back to the shareholder letter from last January, it was a tough letter, but the message was we need to clean things up. We need to get recapitalized and we need to fund these growth businesses. So if people go back and look at that letter, we could say, wow, we made huge progress. But now we have that posture. So the hard work is now the execution. And how do you take a platform that's regional? Sure, half of the end-of-life market is in the Southwest region. United States, absolutely Nevada and these Nevada permits and platform positions us to capture it. But it's much bigger than that. The United States has over 1.3 billion panels deployed. They're coming end of life rapidly, and that's only 1/8 of the world. The world has just as big of a dilemma, 8x relative to the U.S. So the conversation was around expanding governance, expanding international business competency, accessing capital markets competency. So we're thrilled to announce the addition of 3 new independent directors. Donald Colvin, who has extensive and frankly, complex financial management background, but a very, very strong solar industry experience being the Chair and a Board member of a public solar manufacturer of global footprint and just the global public company governance posture from chairing boards to chairing audit committees. And then Steve Pei, as I mentioned, with extensive, I mean, quite remarkable capital markets background, entrepreneurial, what was intriguing was the notion of investing in smaller early-stage companies and watching them become national or international successes and watching those values increase dramatically. And then Bob Spence, who has an exceptional background in refining, in recycling and electrification recycling to boot, including international operations, 30-plus international sites in public and international governance experience, both from audit, from acquisition, from oversight. We really could have spent a couple of years working on the searching and recruiting and aligning and onboarding of our Board. We really jump-started that. So I think from a perspective of really, really strong platform that can really handle all of the things that are coming, sweeping across the U.S. We've got a really good plan for that. But this won't stop there. This market is just extraordinary. So we're welcoming our expanded Board. And I guess the final takeaway is when 2 of your top 4 investors are represented on your Board, that screams a lot. We couldn't be more thankful Steve Pei of Gratia. Michael Kaufman at MAK, Craig and the rest of the team that just worked so, so diligently to make all this happen for us. We thank you very, very much. And for 2026, that team, that governance structure, that capital base is aligned, right? We're aligned on these objectives, which is very, very much, first and foremost, to monetize our noncore legacy mining assets. We've gone from a few years ago talking to less than credible people to talking to marginally capable people to now being engaged with very, very serious mining counterparties that absolutely like what we have here, what we've maintained here, which is a great mining district, great resources. If there's any question about this decision, let me put everybody's mind at rest. Every dollar that we take from the mining assets and put into the recycling assets multiplies exponentially. And let's be clear, if we were going to mine these assets it would take $30 million, $40 million, maybe $50 million of capital to put a mine into production. That's with an existing resource and a permitted platform. There would still be a lot to do. So in that context, it's money that doesn't go to solar recycling. That's a nonstarter for us. It never was a starter for us, frankly. But every dollar that we can then pull out of that nonproductive asset and put into the recycling business, I think a few of you heard me say, our mining assets, which we believe have good value and are very attractive, have about 2.5 million ounces of silver in situ just in the Dayton resource alone. And yes, that would take 6 or 7 years to mine once the mine got up and running. 2 of our facilities in Nevada, which we now know where they're going to be and they're up and getting up and running, would produce that much silver annually, okay? That's just 2, not 7. So you can see the difference in throughput and cash generation from what you could call 2 different silver mines. We also want to monetize our noncore legacy real estate. I'm going to give you more transparency on that today simply because we finally came to sufficient progress, both with Sierra Springs' Board and company and with third parties that are very, very interested in these assets. The value is higher, the ownership is higher. So the amount that we're going to monetize here, hopefully, will be pleasantly higher than anyone might have been expecting. So we're going to do both of those things. Green Li-ion, we also want to monetize. It's less within our control. The company is making extraordinary progress, truly exceeded my expectations in terms of their journey to profitability. They have an operating facility in Oklahoma. We own 13% of the company. And they've announced that they're going to move into a public listing in Australia sometime later this year. So once Green Li-ion is successful in its endeavor to becoming a public company, then we'll have a much easier and clearer exit strategy for that investment. We've worked very, very hard on all these monetization items. This is the crux of the corporate objectives. We've had to put more capital into Sierra Springs but at great gain. That wasn't clear before because the deals weren't structured and they weren't announced, but they are now structured. And we've already taken effectively what was just under 17% of Sierra Springs to well over 36%, 37%. That number could end up easily at well over 50% for something that we think has hundreds of millions of dollars of value. We don't think that based on conjecture, there is monster engagement in Northern Nevada right now because if you're able to secure sufficient power to the land, it's in immediate demand. If you're not able to secure sufficient power to the land, there's no interest, okay? So we're on the verge of something very meaningfully here. I think 2026, credibly now, we'll see monetization of mining, monetization of noncore real estate. And frankly, timing couldn't be better. So we're really all about supporting the exponential growth of the metals business, not just for national dominance really for setting the global standard in this recycling business. We crushed it in '25. And when I say we, I mean the metals team, Fortunato, Paul, Kayla, I mean, they got the permits, first of its kind. Leo was absolutely instrumental in supporting us, one of our Board members in navigating through that regulatory regime. We didn't only get first-of-its-kind permits. We were held to what we originally thought was a ridiculously high standard. But now with hindsight, it looks like it will be very difficult for any existing competitor that we know of to even set foot in Nevada and even get permits within 2 years. So to the extent Nevada sits on 50% of the end-of-life market, certainly between now and 2030, now and 2035, wow, we're literally on the beachhead of a battle that doesn't see any competitors anywhere near of what we've positioned here. We don't want to stop in the Southwest region because that's only half the market. We want to get to the rest of the U.S., and that will come, as Judd said, with less resistance and much more rapidly. We also have designed the engineered process for recovering the metals from our tailings. I'll give you a little bit more color on that. But we did that with leveraging a handful of partners between universities and companies that have existing assets and existing infrastructure that allows us to take Fortunato's engineered design and very efficiently test up to a demo, which we hope to have here by the end of this year. So all that work in 2025 really positioned us to move fast, right? So what do we want to do? We want to get this facility up and running. Substantially all of the equipment has arrived. The ovens are arriving now and the ovens literally represent -- I just looked at the final truck schedules, represents 20 full 18-wheelers. So you start to get a sense of the magnitude of this process and these systems. Some of you have come and visited and I'll show some pictures of some of the equipment as it's getting assembled here. But it's all coming in, we're on schedule. It wouldn't be right to say that 3 or 4 weeks of slippage hasn't occurred, but that was already buffered in our schedule. So commissioning in Q1, operating in Q2 holds. We're very happy about that, bringing the thing online. And another thing that's happening is that we're starting to see -- it's almost like if you're in the fourth quarter of a football game, you're starting to see some of our competition, take a knee or move aside. Really, that's an analogy to say that our customers, the true utility scale companies that are now very seriously engaged in a very big end-of-life problem. They're almost only -- they're certainly not talking to the 2 or 3 people that we previously talked about as showing up most often. So there's a really good trend there. Something even more strategic is happening. Some of these institutions are either very, very large or part of even larger organizations, and they've engaged us for more strategic things. You've heard me talk about co-locating on one of the sites or venturing into a third or fourth site. This all ties to getting market share, right? So we want to dominate the market share. We're very happy with how those underlying conversations are going. And we've identified the second site. We are pinning it down, final stages. The permits actually have already been submitted. So we're excited about it. It will be in Clark County. It will be just outside of Las Vegas, exactly where we wanted to position the second site for this Southwest region. And California is permitted up and running. Ohio is coming up in line. Those right now are primarily either storage and/or transition activities, prep activities, logistics activities. There's no processing. There's no processing that we're planning at all for California, but certainly, Ohio would evolve into that, and we're looking as well at a specific site in Texas. So that side of things are moving very, very quickly and we're continuing all of those efforts. '26 is going to be -- as foundational as '25 was '26 is going to show the light. '26 is going to show the large industrial system running. It's going to show it turning profitable. It's going to show volumes increasing. And you're going to see revenue goes from $100,000 a month to $200,000 a month to $1 million a month to $2 million a month. That's our profile for 2026. And we don't see any reason why that isn't going to come together just like that. So we don't need to talk that much about silver demand. Every one of you that I've talked to seems to understand the supply and demand equation for silver and is very bullish on it. Even with some pullback, we're sitting at $70 silver, which is above anything that we've modeled in our process. As I mentioned previously, even at $60 silver, our offtake revenue isn't $125 a ton. It's $375 a ton. So we already have an enhanced profile given the current realities. You see the inside of 600 Lake in this picture, that was 7 months ago. Now when you look at the inside of 600 Lake, it's assembling equipment. That shine that you see on the floor there is an epoxy that we had to lay down that outlines perfectly the footprint of the large system. You can't see the ends of the footprint. It's extremely large, 80, 90, 100 feet of processing, fully integrated, fully automated. We are testing the robotic arms. We are assembling the front-end crushers. We are pulling together all of the equipment. And we're heavily finalizing the grading and the preparation. Fencing is going to go up next week for the storage. And it just gives you some context here. If you're looking at this picture, hopefully, that building there in the background is where our demo facility sits, okay? So we're talking about major -- I kept saying like this enormous expansion or massive expansion for storage, you're starting to get a sense of it. I was annoyed earlier, one of our investors posted 4 beautiful pictures. They must have been circling the site or something. I criticized my team and said, these guys are getting better pictures than I'm getting. So if you're on Twitter or X, you can see some even more elaborate pictures of this development that's happening real time. And the holy grail is not getting $125 a ton for tailings or $375 a ton for tailings. Those numbers reflect us capturing 50% or 60% of the silver value and leaving the silicon metal and leaving the copper and depending on the types of panel, leaving the gallium or the tellurium or the iridium behind, what we've applied it for a grant on and what we've already started the development work on is being able to capture the substantial majority, we'd love to say substantially all of the value from those critical metal recoveries from the tailings. So we've been ridiculously busy site preparing. We've been ridiculously busy receiving equipment. We've been busy expanding the market, and that would be satisfactory. But it's been exceptional that the team has made and forced the capacity to design this refining solution. We don't -- when we say we feel like we're a couple of years ahead in recycling, we're humble about that. We're not arrogant about it. We want to expand it. We want to assume we're 1 day ahead. We don't want to assume we're 2 years ahead. But we're talking about recycling. We're not talking about refining. We don't see anybody even talking about these types of refining solutions. And the reason this is so important, and I think the reason our capital base is so interested is 3.5 million panels last year would load one of our production lines. In 4 years, that number is going to be 33 million. We would need 10 production lines to do that. And I'm not sure if people appreciate it. One production line that $13 million of one production line can do 3.3 million panels a year. But that facility that you just saw, it was permitted for 2.5 production lines, really 3 production lines with the capacity of doing 250,000. So if this Southwest region does anything close to what we think it's going to do, it's doubling the capacity, 2.5x in the capacity of that facility will have literally 0 permitting lead time. 0 permitting lead time. It's already permitted. What it will require, of course, is equipment ordering lead time, which we can let the market tell us when to trigger that. And this is the old map that most of you have seen. But for any of you that haven't, here's Arizona, Nevada, California. These are the 1.3 billion, 1.4 billion panels that are deployed in the U.S. The fatter the circle, the older the panel. That's why these 2 facilities in Nevada are so critical and why we're going after this half of the market so diligently, so vigorously. But an enhanced metal value, you're not talking about $55 million or $60 million of cash flow from one facility running full. You're talking about $75 million to $80 million for one facility running full. And that doesn't consider the enhancement that would come with the refining solution. Now let me just spend a little bit more time on this monetization of noncore assets. Some of you may have seen previously a higher NPV that we calculated for our mining assets. That number was correct. It stays correct. But as I said earlier, these assets take some capital to put into production. As I said earlier, we're engaged with some very, very serious counterparties. They have capital. That's, I guess, the litmus test for me on, are they serious? They have capital. They have capital to deploy, and we're talking about a range of value of, let's say, $50 million or $60 million. We're not necessarily talking about all cash upfront, but we are talking about full monetization. What we would like to do is sell it for all cash or we'll sell it for cash with some very relevant or meaningful milestones. Any dollar that we pull out of nonproductive assets to put in our solar business, we believe, is a home run. With the Sierra Springs, we have been allocating capital to that. You'll see that it increased. But we have agreement now to convert that into ownership at extraordinary values. And I'm going to talk about that a little bit more. I'm going to give you a little bit more color. But I've been busy with this because it's super active, right? Nevada went through a monstrous hyperscale data center expansion. It's listed right now as fifth or sixth in the U.S. with projects under construction with 29 projects under construction, and it's every big name. We have an industrial park very, very close to us, not the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Park. Everybody knows about that. Another one that's very close to us in Silver Springs that is out soliciting industrial lands for this purpose, and they secured access to power other than the grid. The grid is tapped out. The grid is not available until God knows when. So we secured similarly access to that power required some small financial commitment initially, a small bond, $1 million, $1.5 million of posting, which was easy, but it opened up the whole world for us. Now we've got -- I'll be very frank, like I'm behind in being responsive to them. And if that's annoying to you, it should be because it's annoying to me. But the dollars that we're talking about are not $45 million or $50 million like we talked about before. It's a couple of hundred million. And that doesn't include our properties that we own 100% and directly. So as you can see, it's in everybody's interest for us to prioritize and monetize these assets. The mining assets last year, we acquired the Haywood quarry. You see it right here, this Haywood target on the map. We also sold some of the northern properties, which are now taken off of this map. But in selling those northern properties, we also got these green -- there's about 240 acres that we added that fully support and surround both the mining of the Dayton asset and the processing for the Dayton asset. We have those 230 acres at no additional consideration. So between the Haywood property, which is ideal for processing Dayton and those other properties, which fully support the mining and the processing of Dayton, we've made this much more salable much more monetizable. And as I said earlier, we're fully engaged. When we first announced that Haywood purchase, some people were like, I thought we weren't interested in mining. I thought we were trying to monetize the mining. And I just want to make it clear, that's exactly what those moves were designed to position us for. And these properties, they're flat, they're expansive and they're very, very attractive to real miners. So we're really having productive conversations. Judd is getting very, very close, and I really appreciate that helping that support. Now just more transparency on Sierra Springs because there's approval on the Sierra Springs side, right? There is approval for Comstock to take the lead, for Comstock to drive this thing to the finish line, for Comstock to enable this bigger monetization. And of course, Comstock needs to benefit dramatically from that capacity. What where we are is we're sitting in the largest opportunity zone, if not the largest, one of, by far, the largest opportunity zones in the United States. It's not only an expansive amount of land sitting right by Lake Tahoe, the fact that it's 10 miles from the California border and maybe more importantly, 1 truck day away from 7 different states and 75 million people is one of the biggest reasons that all of these data centers and all of these manufacturing companies are locating here. The other reason is that it's the environmental climate is almost perfect for optimal cooling of these data centers. But it's even more than that. It's literally Nevada -- Northern Nevada is literally one of the safest places in the country when it comes to the hazard map or the disaster avoidance map. We don't have hurricanes. We don't have hailstorms. We don't have all of these impediments. And so it's not coincidence that Google, Apple, Microsoft Switch, Tract and at least 2 dozen more are locating here for mega hyperscaling. And for us, it was when USA Parkway was built from a nonexistent road to a dirt road to a 4-lane super highway, connecting Reno right down into Silver Springs where my better lucky than good comment keeps coming out. We were sitting right there ready to receive that ball. It's still somewhat pioneering 2 years ago. Everything was happening in the Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center. Everything is happening up in Fernley. And people kept saying, well, what about Silver Springs? What about Silver Springs? Well, if you look at the map this way, you see this connecting highway. Tesla's gigafactor is really what put us on the map, but the data centers are really what exploded the map. It comes right down to our properties. You see the Comstock load here just 30 minutes down the road, Highway 50, and then you see the congregation of this asset here. I haven't spoken about this much because we spend -- Fortunato and the team spent 110% of their time on Comstock Metals. I like to think I spend 50% of my time supporting Comstock Metals. I want that to be 90% of my time. Judd is handling the monetization of the mining assets. I'm handling the monetization of Sierra Springs. And I think it's also important to say I've never took a penny from Silver Springs. I've never gotten any compensation from Sierra Springs. I only own stock there because I bought it with my own money, and I've agreed to rectify that. Like we are going to align my interest only and solely with LODE. There is no even debate or discussion about it. I've already committed to it, right? What you're going to see with hopefully some foresight, but certainly soon with hindsight is that load investors own something very, very valuable here. As exciting as monetizing something that's worth a couple of hundred million potentially would be, what can be done with that money in solar recycling is a whole other level of excitement. You can read up all the articles about what's happening in Northern Nevada. It's very easy to see them. But what's really important to see is that -- when I talk about these values, I'm not pulling them out of the air. When we first started this thing, we were getting these properties for dirt. I mean, literally dirt cheap with almost like water rights coming for free. But Industrial Park was at $2 to $3, $4 a square foot. Then it was $4 to $5 a square foot. Then it was $6 to $8 a square foot. Then Microsoft lands and starts pushing $10 a square foot. Those are incredible numbers. If those numbers -- if we're even close to those types of numbers, my numbers will be understated. So when Tract CEO came out and said that they're going to invest $100 billion in the next 10 years in Northern Nevada. And that means from the Peru shelf right up here by Switch to right across the street from our properties in Silver Springs. There's 3 major developments that they're breaking ground on right now. If you don't understand it or if you'd like to see it, it will only take you 20 minutes for Reno to see Monster trapped platforms being built and positioned. So that only enhances the value like everything in this area. And if you look at this map, the airport being the blue center, everything else in color around us is part of our portfolio that I want to monetize for us, except the top of #11 here. That's where Microsoft came in. And then right alongside of it, Tract is coming in. So you go from literally being out in the middle of nowhere on the loneliest highway in America to USA Parkway plugging into us to track and Microsoft coming in across the street. I mean it's extraordinarily exciting, but none of it would mean anything if the he Great Basin natural gas transmission company didn't show up 4 months ago and say, we're going to spend a couple of billion dollars, and we're going to expand gas into this area, into firmly into Tri-Center, literally right into Silver Springs. If they didn't come out and say that, we'd still be talking about why the hell are we going to -- why can't we sell these properties. But with that power commitment, the game has changed dramatically, and we're going to see something really exciting happen. So it took a little bit longer than I was expecting. I apologize. But