Thanks, Tim. Good morning, everyone. Bank of Marin continues to focus on further strengthening our core deposit franchise and maintaining robust liquidity and capital levels, while delivering exceptional service to existing and new customers as we position for further earnings improvement in the future. We generated $4.6 million in net income for the third quarter, or $0.28 per share as we began to realize the full anticipated benefit to profitability of the balance sheet restructuring we did during the second quarter. Our net interest income increased 8% from the prior quarter to $24.3 million, largely driven by an 18 basis point increase in our net interest margin, primarily due to balance sheet repositioning and a shift in deposit pricing that reversed the upward trend in deposit costs while staying aligned with the broader market. By the middle of the third quarter, our net interest margin had increased by 30 basis points over the level just prior to the balance sheet repositioning, consistent with our expectations, and we continue to see that benefit. The yield on loans was negatively impacted by 9 basis points in the third quarter as a result of interest reversals on two non-accrual loans, reducing net interest margin for the quarter by 6 basis points. Our non-interest expense decreased by $1.5 million from the prior quarter, mostly due to a decline in salaries and benefits expense due to staff reductions made in the second quarter and continued reallocation of staffing to align with the strategic direction of the bank. Additionally, the decline resulting from charitable contributions annually granted in the second quarter was offset by a $615,000 accrual for a non-repeatable legal resolution, which negatively impacted earnings per share by $0.04. Moving to non-interest income. Excluding the loss on security sales that impacted our second quarter results, we had an increase in non-interest income largely due to an increase in wealth management revenue. Our total deposits were $3.3 billion at September 30. As Tim mentioned, we typically see seasonal inflows in the third quarter and due to the nature of our client base with many professional services firms, we expect to see some seasonal outflows in the fourth quarter due to bonus payments, profit and other distributions and larger business expenses. Our average cost of total deposits increased just 1 basis point in the third quarter compared to a 7 basis point increase in the prior quarter. Not only does that continue the deceleration of deposit cost increases seen in the first and second quarters, but it also reflects a turn in deposit costs late in the third quarter. Since initiating our declining rate deposit pricing strategy, the average spot rate on deposit -- non-deposit network, interest-bearing balances declined 18 basis points, while the balances themselves went up approximately $10 million by September 30. Our pricing strategy weighs rate reductions in the context of relationship pricing balance sheet growth and net interest margin considerations. Disciplined credit management remains a hallmark of Bank of Marin as well. Classified assets were down primarily due to one classified non-accrual loan for $1.8 million that was paid off in full, including all accrued interest. Non-accrual loans had a net increase primarily related to an $8.1 million real estate loan whose renewal negotiations remain ongoing with no expectations for actual losses. As Tim mentioned, overall, there were no new issues and increases were partially offset by pay downs, payoffs and returns to accrual status. 50% of non-accrual loans are paying as agreed and 80% are secured by real estate. Due to the stability in our loan portfolio, we did not record any provision for credit losses in the third quarter and we reversed $233,000 in provisions for losses on unfunded commitments. The allowance for credit losses remains high at a level of 1.47% of total loans. Loan balances of $2.1 billion at the end of the third quarter were up $8 million from the prior quarter. We had some movement from construction loans to CRE loans, while the largest area of growth was in residential mortgages, primarily due to the portfolio of high-quality in-market residential mortgage loans that we purchased with part of the proceeds from the securities sales in the second quarter. Given the continued strength of our capital ratios, our Board of Directors declared a cash dividend of $0.25 per share on October 24, the 78th consecutive quarterly dividend paid by the company. With that, I'll turn it back over to you, Tim, to share some final comments.