Thank you, Mark. And good morning everyone. Banner’s credit metrics continue to be strong and our super community bank model continues to serve our clients well. Delinquent loans as of June 30 were 0.28% of total loans, a reduction from 0.37% of total loans reported as of March 31 and compared to 0.19% as of June 30, 2022. Adversely classified loans represent 1.38% of total loans, down from 1.46% as of the linked quarter and compared to 1.63% as of June 30, 2022. Net loan losses continue to be negligible at $336,000 for the three months ending June 30, and Banner's non-performing assets remain modest at 0.18% of total assets. As a result of the loan growth reported in a quarter coupled with further deterioration in the economic forecast, we posted a provision for loan losses of $3.6 million as well as a $1.2 million reserved for unfunded loan commitments resulting in a net provision for loan losses of $4.8 million. In addition, we recorded a $2 million provision for securities available for sale in conjunction with ratings downgrades on financial institutions subordinated debt held within the investment portfolio. In total, the provision for credit losses for the quarter was $6.8 million. After the provision, our ACL reserve totaled $144.7 million or 1.38% of total loans as of June 30. This is a reduction of one basis point when compared to the linked quarter and compares to coverage of 1.36% as of June 30, 2022. The reserve currently provides 513% coverage of our non-performing loans. A review of the loan activity reflects increased loan origination volumes when compared to the prior quarter with loan totals increasing $312 million or 12% on an annualized basis. Excluding the growth in one- to four-family residential loans, the annualized growth rate is 9%. C&I-line utilization increased 1% in the quarter and we reported moderate loan growth in both commercial and small business lending, a testament to the success of our super community bank model and commitment to being open for business through all cycles. Year-over-year commercial business loans are up 11%. Excluding multifamily, our commercial real estate balances increased 2% in the quarter, primarily related to expanding relationships with existing clients who either acquired new properties or who moved additional loans to Banner as they refinanced properties held in their portfolios. Balances are down 1% when compared to June 30, 2022. And as discussed last quarter, the current interest rate environment coupled with the changing economic environment is expected to further mute growth in commercial real estate loans in the near of term. The portfolio continues to perform well and similar to last quarter, less than 2% of the total CRE portfolio is adversely classified at this time. Our office portfolio remains stable in size as well as credit quality. In line with prior disclosures and as reflected in the investor presentation, the office portfolio currently represents 6.5% of total loans, remains very granular in size, geographically diversified and is split roughly fifty-fifty between investor CRE and owner-occupied. There has been negligible change in the composition of the office portfolio since the report out last quarter. Still, I will provide a quick review related to the metropolitan area office statistics. We have less than $60 million of office loans in the city of Seattle, and of that less than $10 million of exposure in the Central Business District with an average loan size of $1.4 million. In Sacramento, we have slightly over $40 million of office secured loans, of which only two are located in the central business district with an aggregate exposure of less than $5 million. We have less than $15 million of exposure in the City of Bellevue, Washington with an average loan size of less than $1.5 million. We have less than $15 million in exposure in the City of Portland, Oregon with an average loan size of less than $1 million. In Los Angeles, our aggregate office exposure is less than $10 million and the average loan size is under $1 million. We currently have only one office property in San Francisco with a balance of under $1.4 million, and importantly within these metropolitan areas we currently have only two office properties adversely classified with an aggregate balance of less than $1.5 million. Multifamily real estate loans were flat in a quarter, but up 22% year-over-year. In total, the multifamily portfolio continues to be approximately 50% affordable housing and 50% market rate. And as I have commented before, the average loan size is less than $1.5 million with balance of spread across our footprint. Construction and development loan balances declined by 3% in the quarter reflecting a continued decline in residential construction projects as sales of completed residential starts continue to outpace replacements within this product line. When compared to June of 2022, construction and land development loans reflect an increase of 8% driven primarily by the growth in the multifamily construction portfolio and to a much lesser extent to growth in the land development book. Multifamily construction loans have increased nearly 70% year-over-year with over two-thirds of the dollars related to affordable housing projects. While the volume of residential construction starts has slowed, home sales did pick up this quarter across our footprint, a function of limited housing inventory that is compounded by the lack of resale housing supply, which is working in the builder's favor. The portfolio remains diversified both in product mix and price point, starts to spread across our geography and I continue to be pleased with the portfolio's performance. And it bears repeating that we have remained consistent in our underwriting and our land exposure continues to be limited to our strongest sponsors. As noted last quarter, builders have been proactive in marketing their product to keep completed homes moving. They are being selective in adding new starts and they remain well capitalized and able to absorb a longer sales cycle and reduce profit margins. In total residential construction exposure remains acceptable at 5% of the portfolio, down 1%, and of that 45% is comprised of our custom 1-to-4 family residential mortgage product. When you include multifamily, commercial construction and land the total construction exposure remains at 14% of total loans. As expected agricultural loan balances increased in the quarter due to operating line usage, up 14% when compared to the linked quarter; balances are up 9% year-over-year. And lastly as noted in the earnings release we again reported growth in the consumer mortgage portfolio up 7% in the quarter. Continuing the trend of retaining completed all-in-one custom construction loans on balance sheet. I will close on the same way I started noting that Banner's credit metrics continue to be strong and our super community bank model continues to serve our clients well. As I said last quarter, our credit culture is designed for success through our business cycles and our moderate risk profile with consistent underwriting and robust review processes is a source of strength as is our solid reserve for loan losses and capital base. Certainly the economic environment continues to be uncertain and when the effects of a recession begin to emerge we will not be immune. That said we remain well positioned to navigate whatever this economic cycle brings. With that I'll turn the microphone over to Peter for his comments. Peter?