All right, thanks, Bruce. Now, let's turn to slide 10. As I said last quarter, our success, it's the result of a discipline growth strategy that's fundamentally focused on customers, markets, services, and people. As Bruce mentioned, our capital allocation strategy is a critical component of our growth that enables us to enter new geographies and markets through M&A, enables us to invest in ourselves through funding innovations and organic growth, and enables us to allocate capital to support our shareholders when the market is unusually volatile or substantially undervalues us. I'm going to close my comments today by talking about who we are and where we fit in the E&C industry because I don't use that term undervalue flippantly. Investment in Bowman is a US domestic infrastructure investment with no exposure to construction risks. We're a true professional services business provider with a high net-to-growth ratio because we're the designers, engineers, project managers, and problem solvers. We're not resellers or builders. We touch every aspect of built infrastructure that impacts real communities and real people that infrastructure must be continually expanded to accommodate the growth of our communities and of our economy as a finite useful life requiring it to continually be replaced and maintained. Furthermore, changing environmental conditions such as weather patterns and rising sea levels drive the need to reconfigure, relocate and fortify that infrastructure. There're more infrastructure demands in the US than there are companies like ours to do the work. While market segments within the industry may have periods of softness, US infrastructure overall is a market with insatiable demand and a high degree of reliability. The intellectual property that's core to our revenue has a longevity and stability that's not subject to sudden disruptions. So what contributes to Bowman's long-term value in the market? How are we different? Let's turn to slide 11. We don't invest in heavy equipment because we don't physically build anything. This asset light approach allows us to maintain a lower CapEx and better cash efficiency. We don't generate revenue from pass-throughs, we do the work ourselves. That means our revenue is high quality, margin accretive, non-commodity, and reflective of the value we deliver. It also gives us tighter control over execution, over customer experience, and labor optimization, which results in a highly defensible business model. We're not distracted by international work, so we don't contend with the friction of trade wars and geopolitical issues like many of our peers do. We don't directly source materials or components of our deliverables internationally, so there's no firsthand exposure to tariff-related costs or supply chain volatility. All that said, we're self aware enough to acknowledge that some of our customers operate in tariff sensitive sectors, and we continue to monitor for downstream impacts on project timing decisions. Currently, our exposure is minimal and well manageable. Overall, we believe we are well aligned with the priorities of the economy and the US policies that favor the domestic built environment. Summarizing the first quarter, our asset light, high margin business model sets us apart in all the right ways. We deliver value through self-performed work, not pass throughs, giving us tighter controls, stronger execution, and more resilient margins. Our domestic focus shields us from global volatility while aligning us with US policy tailwinds that favor local infrastructure and domestic investment. With superior cash efficiency, scalable operations, and a disciplined approach to growth, we believe we offer one of the more compelling and defensible value propositions in the market today. Looking ahead, we're keeping an eye on several policy developments that could create long term opportunities for us. The example that stands out is the proposed Ships Act, which reinforces the Navy's goal of expanding the fleet to at least 355 ships. We expect this kind of sustained federal investment will have a ripple effect across the industrial base, especially in engineering, infrastructure, and workforce support. We currently support customers tied to the defense and maritime sectors, and we see this as an example of a space where our capabilities can add value over time. Executive orders and incentives which encourage domestic re-industrialization present future opportunities for Bowman. We expect to actively support clients as they build, retrofit, and staff new manufacturing facilities. We're already seeing act activity supporting these efforts positively impacting our energy, the mining, oil, gas, marine, and building infrastructure divisions. As we look to the rest of the year, we're encouraged by the momentum we see so far in the second quarter. We expect to see a similar growth pattern to what we experienced last year, where momentum builds through the second and third quarters with growth accelerating mid-year before leveling out in the fourth quarter. Given what we know today, we remain optimistic and we're reaffirming our full year guidance of net revenues in the range of $428 million to $440 million with adjusted EBITDA between $70 million and $76 million. This would put us in the top tier of peer performance on an organic growth and margin basis. I'm going to close by saying thank you to all of our employees for their capacity to drown out the noise and remain steadfast in their focus on delivering for customers, for shareholders, and for each other. With that, I'm going to turn the call back to Becky for questions.