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 September 30 were 0.27% of total loans compared to 0.28% of total loans reported as of June 30 and 0.22% of total loans as of September 30, 2022. Adversely classified loans represent 1.17% of total loans down from 1.38% as of the linked quarter and compared to 1.39% as of September 30, 2022. Net loan losses continue to be moderate at $663,000 for the quarter and $1.8 million year to date. And Banner's nonperforming assets remain low at 0.17% of total assets. Our reserve for loan losses continues to be a source of strength. We posted a provision for loan losses of $2.9 this quarter covering the moderate level of net charge off taken in the quarter as well as providing for loan growth. In addition, we provided $346,000 to the reserve for unfunded loan commitments for a total provision for loan losses of $3.3 million. Due to an improvement in market valuation, we released $1.3 million of the provision recorded last quarter that was related to financial institutions subordinated debt held within the investment portfolio. In total, the net provision for credit losses for the quarter was $2 million. After the provision for credit losses, our ACL reserve totaled to $147 million or 1.38% of total loans as of September 30. This coverage level is identical to that reported in the linked quarter as well as that reported as of September 30, 2022, and currently provides 560% coverage of our non-performing loans. As reflected in the release, loan originations declined modestly quarter-over-quarter. Still, loan outstandings grew by $139 or 5.3% on an annualized basis and are up 8% year-over-year. C&I-line utilization decreased 1% in the quarter and balances were down $49 million in the quarter due to a combination of loan payoffs and decreased line utilization. This was partially offset by a 2% increase in small business scored loans. Compared to September 30, 2022, commercial and small business scored loans are up 5.4%. We also saw an increase of $17 million in owner-occupied CRE or 7.4% on an annualized basis. Excluding multifamily, our commercial real estate balances decreased 1% in the quarter driven primarily by the payoff of a substandard assisted living facility as well as an underperforming self storage property and are down 3% when compared to September 30, 2022. Given the expectation of a sustained interest rate in increased rate environment and the impact of overall market dynamics, we continue to anticipate muted commercial real estate loan growth in the near term. That said, it is important to note that the portfolio continues to perform well and similar to last quarter less than 1.5% of the total CRE portfolio is adversely classified at this time. There has been negligible change in our office portfolio performance. It continues to be granular in size, diversified in geographic location, and overall credit performance has been solid. In line with prior disclosures and as reflected in the investor presentation, the office portfolio currently represents 6.3% of total loans and is split roughly fifty-fifty between investor CRE and owner occupied and adversely classified loans in this asset class are limited to $1.2 million. It is worth noting that there has been no meaningful change in the portfolio of loans secured by office properties within the major metropolitan areas across our geographic footprint. Multifamily real estate loans were up 9.5% in the quarter as multiple affordable housing projects completed construction and were moved into the permanent bucket. In total, the multifamily portfolio was split approximately 55% affordable housing and 45% market rate and as I have commented before the average loan size is less than $1 million with balances spread across our footprint. Construction and development loan balances declined by $6 million in the quarter or 40 basis points. The decline in residential construction outstandings continued in the quarter as sales of completed residential starts continue to outpace new takedowns, down 2% in the quarter and down nearly 20% when compared to September 2022. Commercial construction loans were also down in the quarter primarily due to the expected refinancing of various projects upon completion. These declines were partially offset by increased outstandings on the multifamily construction projects underway. Multifamily construction outstandings are up 64% year-over-year, a reflection of the strong origination of affordable housing projects as well as a modest level of origination of market rate, middle income project for strong sponsors. When compared to September of 2022, in total, construction and land development loans reflect an increase of 4%, driven primarily by the growth in the multifamily construction portfolio and to a much lesser extent to growth in the land development book. As discussed last quarter, the pace of residential construction starts continues to be slower than historical norms. Builders remain proactive in moving completed products and while they continue to benefit from the general lack of resale housing inventory on the market, they remain cautious with the level of inventory under construction. In total, residential construction exposure remains acceptable at 5% of the portfolio, flat with last quarter and of that 45% is comprised of our custom 1-to-4 family residential mortgage loan product. When you include multifamily, commercial construction and land, the total construction exposure remains at 14% of total loans and as is customary the portfolio continues to be diversified both in product mix and price point with starts to spread across our geography. In short, the portfolio continues to perform well. As expected, agricultural loan balances increased again this quarter due to operating line usage, up 8% when compared to the linked quarter. Balances are up 12% 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 in the same way I started, noting that Banner's credit metrics continued to be strong and our super community bank model continues to serve our clients well. And I will reiterate a theme that has been consistent of late, which is that our credit quality metrics should not be expected to get better than they currently are. We will not be immune to credit deterioration that emerges as we move through this cycle. Still, the credit culture that runs throughout Banner is a source of strength, so two are the solid reserves for loan losses and capital base, all of which position us well for the future. With that, I'll turn the microphone over to Rob for his comments. Rob?