Thanks, Katie. I’ll start my commentary on Page 11 of our investor deck that is posted in the Investor Relations part of our website. Let’s start on key revenue drivers. On a reported basis, net interest income increased 7.5% over the prior quarter, while fee income decreased 18.4%. The increase in net interest income was driven by organic loan growth at higher spreads and lower interest expense tied to Fed rate cuts in the back half of 2024. Non-interest income in the prior quarter included the sale of our property, resulting in a $3.5 million gain. Excluding this gain, non-interest income was down 9.2% from the prior quarter on an adjusted basis, primarily due to the seasonal decline in Mortgage originations. Our fee income remains over 40% of revenues and well above the industry average of 19%. Let’s dive into the drivers of net interest income on the next slide. Turning to Page 12, in the first quarter, net interest income increased to a new record level for Alerus at $41.2 million, and our reported non-interest margin increased another 21 basis points to 3.41%. Our non-interest income is now over 2 times larger than we initially had on our initial public offering in 2019. Our non-interest margin continues to show improvement. Our total cost of funds dropped 19 basis points to 2.34%, as we lowered deposit and money market rates due to Fed cuts in the back half of 2024. We had $5.1 million of purchase account increase in our 42 basis points in the quarter. Of those 42 basis points, 4 basis points were from early payoffs. Lastly, we had a non-accrual recovery, which favorably impacted net interest margin by 5 basis points. Our net interest margin has rebounded not only from our balance being slightly liability sensitive, but from continued discipline in pricing on both new loan and deposit originations. We continue to focus on delivering a full C&I relationship ROE over 12% in Banking. Let’s turn to Page 13 to talk about our earning assets. Organic loan growth was 2.3% over the prior quarter, as we continue to grow a Commercial presence, especially in middle-market companies and in business banking. Commercial loans now make up over 70% of total loans versus 58% at our initial public offering in 2019. We continue to transform into a prominent commercial wealth bank within our footprint. Our investment portfolio declined to $839 million or just under 17% of earning assets. AOCI improved to an unrealized loss of $63 million, as we saw the belly of the treasury curve decline over 40 basis points during the first quarter. We continue to let the balance sheet remix from low-yielding investments to higher-yielding loans. Turning to Page 14, on a period-ending basis, our deposits organically grew 2.4% from the prior quarter. While we saw pressure on non-interest-bearing deposits, we still grew our Commercial Banking presence, as public funds and commercial clients were over 42% of total deposits. Synergistic deposits grew 7.5% over the prior quarter, with HSA deposits growing 4.4%. Growth in HSA, which carry low cost of funds around 10 basis points, helped offset some of shift away from non-interest-bearing deposits. Non-interest-bearing deposits are now 19.8% of total deposits. Given an increase in deposits, our loan-to-deposit ratio remained steady at 91.1% and is still below our targeted level of 95%, with nearly no broker deposits. Turning to Page 15, I’ll now talk about our Banking segment. I’ll focus on the fee income components. Overall non-interest income from Banking was $4.6 million for the first quarter. The prior quarter had a $3.5 million gain on the sale of a property. Excluding this gain, non-interest income declined by $2.3 million on an adjusted basis. Of the $2.3 million decline in fee income, Mortgage revenues were down $1.8 million, as overall Mortgage originations were down over 20% sequentially. The first quarter generally tends to be the most seasonally challenging for a Mortgage business. We also had a $734,000 decrease in the fair value of Mortgage servicing rights, which we inherited from the Home Federal acquisition. Currently, we carry $7.4 million of Mortgage servicing rights on our balance sheet and are not looking to actively grow this portfolio. Given recent volatility in interest rates, we do anticipate further fluctuations in the valuation of this MSR portfolio. Besides the $1.8 million decline due to Mortgage, the remainder of the $2.3 million overall decline on adjusted non-interest income was due to less client swap fees being realized. As we said in the past, these swap fees tend to be lumpy each quarter based on client appetite. On Page 16, I’ll provide some highlights on our Retirement business. Total revenue from the business decreased 2.3% mainly due to market base and other fees. We saw growth across our core products and services. The decline of participants was tied specifically to our administrative services only line of business. The fees from this administrative product offering are only at the plan level, so the decline of participants had no material impact on overall revenues. Assets Under Administration and Management decreased by about 2% mainly due to market performance. New business production continues to be solid as we won 161 plans in the first quarter. Lastly, synergistic deposits within Retirement grew 8.8% over the prior quarter. 52.5% of these synergistic deposits in Retirement remain indexed. Turning to Page 17, you can see highlights for our Wealth Management business. On a linked quarter basis, revenues decreased 1.5% while end of quarter Assets Under Management decreased 1.7% mainly due to market performance. Synergistic deposits grew over 4.7% from the previous quarter. Almost 94% of these deposits are indexed. Within Wealth, we are excited about transitioning from a legacy system to a new platform that will drive a better experience for both the financial advisor and client. We believe this new platform will provide more revenue synergies for Alerus as we continue to grow as a Commercial Wealth Bank. Page 18 provides an overview of our non-interest expense. During the quarter, non-interest expense decreased 16.7% as there were less acquisition expenses in the quarter on a reported basis. Our reported efficiency ratio was 68.8% on an adjusted basis, which excludes M&A and severance and signing bonuses. Our efficiency ratio was 66.9% versus 69% in the prior quarter. Most of the proven adjusted efficiency ratio was driven by core expense improvement. Core operating expenses decreased 2.8% from the prior quarter. Turning to Page 19, you can see our credit metrics. During the quarter, net charge-offs were only 4 basis points. Non-performing assets increased -- decreased by almost $11.9 million mainly due to the payoff of a non-accrual commercial real estate loan during the quarter. NPAs and total assets decreased 24 basis points from the prior quarter to 96 basis points. Our allowance for credit losses is now at 1.52% of total loans, which includes over $8.2 million related to non-PCD loans acquired in the Home Federal and Metro Phoenix deals, otherwise known as the CECL double counts. I will discuss our capital liquidity on Page 20. We continue to remain -- to be remain well-capitalized as a common equity Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets is at 10%. Our tangible common equity ratio improved 30 basis points to 7.43%. On the bottom right, you’ll see a breakdown of the sources of $2.9 billion in potential liquidity. Overall, we continue to remain well-positioned from both a liquidity and capital standpoint to support future growth or weather economic uncertainty. Turning to Page 21 now, I’ll update you on our guidance for 2025. We expect the following. Loan growth now of mid-single digits for 2025. While we’ve achieved growth of 2.3% in the first quarter, economic landscape remains fluid. Deposit growth of low-single digits remains the same. For the second and third quarters, we’ll see seasonal deposit outflows from our public funds. Net interest margin of 3.2% to 3.3%. Within the guidance, we’re assuming several things. First, we’re not expecting any more non-accrual recoveries like we saw in the previous quarter, which aided our margin by 5 basis points. Second, we’re only expecting 35 basis points of purchase accounting accretion in the quarter. Our guidance does not include any early payouts, which increase purchase accounting accretion by 4 basis points in the first quarter. Third, we’re expecting seasonal outflows from our public funds, which will impact our net interest margin. And lastly, we’re expecting a further decline in non-interest-bearing deposits. We are forecasting a 200-basis-point mixed shift from non-interest-bearing to interest-bearing as we continue to grow our Commercial presence. We do believe this mixed shift forecast may be conservative. There’s no change to our non-interest income outlook, but with equities down in second quarter, we may see some pressure on fee income with Assets Under Management facing headwinds in both Retirement and Wealth. On the Mortgage side, we’re seeing the normal seasonal uptick in Mortgage originations, which is encouraging. The Mortgage Bankers Association is still forecasting over a 16% growth in originations for 2025. Lastly, we expect our adjusted efficiency ratio, which excludes one-time items, to be below 68% for 2025 as we continue to realize cost aid from Home Federal. In the second quarter, we expect our core expenses to be around $49 million, which includes a seasonal uptick in Mortgage incentives. We remain focused on continuing to manage our expenses prudently and continue to focus on improving the overall profitability of the company. To summarize on Page 22, as we start our first full year after we completed our biggest merger in company history, we are off to a strong start. We continued organic growth in both loans and deposits. For the first quarter, our adjusted pre-provisioned net revenues grew nearly 8.2% over the prior quarter. Our current adjusted ROE, ROTCE and ROA are either in the top quartile or close to the top quartile based on returns over the last decade. We understand this is just one quarter and we remain committed to generating consistent returns for our stakeholders in upcoming quarters and years. With that, I’ll now open it up for Q&A.