Thank you, Andrea. Good morning, everyone, and welcome to our second quarter earnings call. Our second quarter reflected the full impact of the late Q1 bank failures, resulting in meaningful net interest margin compression due largely to the higher cost of funds on FHLB borrowings and deposits paired with slower lending activity. We believe that this impact is temporary in nature and will not be an indicator of future performance as we have continued to make significant progress by focusing on our balance sheet. In fact, we substantially strengthened the balance sheet by attracting customers, raising deposits, and improving liquidity to position the bank for efficient growth and stronger profitability. Here are a few key highlights of note. After regional bank failures triggered significant industry deposit outflows and price sensitivity, our deposits quickly stabilized late in the first quarter. During the second quarter, we raised $152 million in new balances at below capital market rates. Additionally, we opened over 1,400 accounts for both new and existing customers. New balances, net of normal customer activity and some continued outflow largely to money markets accounts, drove deposit growth of $75 million in the second quarter. Importantly, those new deposits and investment cash flows enabled us to reduce our short-term borrowings at the FHLB by [$113.2] (ph) million or 28% during the second quarter. Deposit growth has continued post quarter-end and included seasonal DDA growth we had anticipated. From quarter end to July 18, we added $116 million to total deposits which are now within $50 million of pre-bank failure levels in early March 2023. Our percentage of demand posits has also increased to a level higher than the pre-pandemic percentage at the end of 2019. At the same time, the rate of increase in the cost of deposits has slowed and FHLB borrowings have fallen another $126 million. Our deposit growth strategy was and continues to be driven by proactive customer outreach and relationship-based pricing discussions. We have not offered CD specials or tapped into brokered CD markets. In the quarter, we saw a natural shift from non-interest bearing to interest bearing deposits as customers saw higher yields on excess cash as well as increased FDIC insurance coverage through our reciprocal deposit network offerings. Second quarter deposit costs increased 49 basis points sequentially due to delivery pricing adjustments that we made. We expect that funding cost increases will level-off in the second half of 2023 as Fed rate hikes and customer reallocation of funds between operating accounts and interest bearing accounts slow. Our deposit mix at June 30 consisted of 48% non-interest bearing deposits, down from 50% last quarter. However, the percentage of non-interest bearing deposits was back up to 50% by July 18. Going forward, we will continue to carefully manage deposit pricing on a customer-specific basis and as we have throughout our history, will remain in close contact with our customers to understand opportunities and risks. In alignment with our stringent liquidity standards, we continue to maintain a high level of liquidity that covers all of our uninsured deposits by over 200%. Notably, our uninsured deposits declined to 29% from 33% of our total deposits at quarter-end. In addition, our average balance per deposit account declined slightly by $2,000 to $6,200 from the prior quarter with our largest deposit representing only 1.3% of total deposits. Our available contingent liquidity was approximately $2 billion and consisted of cash, unencumbered securities and borrowing availability from the FHLB and Federal Reserve Bank. Post quarter end, we have taken additional steps to bolster on-balance sheet liquidity by selling AFS securities and Visa B Class shares at a net breakeven and retaining proceeds in cash. In addition, we entered into fixed pay interest rate swaps to protect our other available-for-sale securities from changes in market value. We also continue to actively engage with and support our borrowers and we are optimistic about identifying compelling lending opportunities in the second half of this year. While lending activity has slowed, the new loans that we are bringing on to our books are high quality credits coming on at notably higher yields than those being paid off. This is providing a boost to our interest income and moving forward, we believe should help us protect our NIM as we continue to fund our pipeline. Additionally, approximately 29% of our loan portfolio will reprice in the next 12 months. If those reprices occurred at today's rates, we estimate it will provide an incremental lift of roughly 30 basis points for the loan portfolio. While loan demand has eased, our teams continue to focus on achieving attractive risk adjusted returns while maintaining solid credit quality. We are sticking to the prudent lending policies and standards that we have always had, carefully monitoring our loan portfolio and proactively adjusting risk rating. While there has been some risk rate migration, largely in special mention loans, there were no meaningful surprises in the quarter. During the second quarter, non-accrual loans held steady at just 10 basis points of total loans. Classified loans comprised only 1.81% of total loans at quarter-end. Classified loans did increase during the quarter centered primarily around the non-office CRE loan, the C&I term loan and increased usage on a previously downgraded line of credit. I'll take a moment to provide added color to our commercial real estate portfolio as it is the largest concentration in our loan book, representing 73% of our total loan balances at the end of the second quarter. Of our total CRE loans, 22% are owner-occupied, which we believe carry a different risk profile than non-owner occupied loans in this environment. Our $366 million of non-owner occupied office portfolio consists of 142 loans with an average loan size of $2.6 million, with the largest loan being $17 million. The average LTV was 55% and the average debt service coverage was 1.67 times based on our most recent annual review process. Lastly, we are actively recruiting proven talent as recent industry disruption has made available a considerable number of seasoned bankers. We have taken advantage of the recent market changes and expect to announce a meaningful recruiting news soon that we believe will help boost lending activity and deposit growth and deliver greater value to our customers and our shareholders. Now, I'll pass it over to Tani to discuss our financial results in greater detail.