Great. Thank you, Gary, and good morning, everyone. While the third quarter marked an important milestone for Bowman in terms of reaching the $500 million annualized gross revenue rate, it also represents our achievement of 2 basic commitments we made to our shareholders this time last year, to prioritize GAAP profitability and to improve our conversion of earnings to cash. This year, we've been hypervigilant about delivering on these 2 basic commitments because unlike political, macroeconomic and labor market uncertainties, these are outcomes we control. We're pleased to have delivered on these commitments. For the third quarter and the 9 months ending September 30, we dramatically increased GAAP net income to $6.6 million and $10.9 million, respectively, compared to net income of $700,000 (sic) [ $800,000 ] and a loss of $2.9 million for the same period last year. Concurrently, we more than doubled our cash flow from operations to $26.5 million from $12.4 million, affirming the capital efficiency of our effort. We achieved this improved performance in part through consistent and sequential growth in billed revenue throughout this year with an 11% year-over-year increase in net revenue in the third quarter with no erosion of our net to gross ratio. Organic net revenue, which excludes revenue from acquisitions closed after September 30, 2024, grew 6.6% for the third quarter and now stands at approximately 11% through 9 months. Also contributing to our improved profitability was our ability to achieve the benefits of scale with revenue growth rates that outpace overhead growth rates. To that end, as revenue grew year-over-year, total overhead, we define as COGS and SG&A, was down 290 basis points as a percentage of net revenue for the quarter at 89.5% and down 500 basis points for the 9 months at 89%. This disciplined approach to overhead growth will be a significant contributor to sustained positive GAAP earnings and an industry-leading margin profile. Turning to some non-GAAP metrics. Adjusted EBITDA in the quarter increased by 8% to $18.3 million, representing a 16.3% margin on net revenue with adjusted EPS of $0.61, doubling Q3 2024. Through 9 months, adjusted EBITDA is up nearly 25% to $53 million and a margin of 16.6% on net revenue, a 150 basis point year-over-year expansion with adjusted EPS of $1.26, again, doubling adjusted EPS in the same period last year. Absolute growth in revenue was broad-based with Transportation up 20%, Power, Utilities and Energy up 17% and Building Infrastructure up 8%. Natural Resources & Imaging, to which we allocated all Surdex related manned aerial and high-resolution mapping revenue last year saw a slight decline as we now allocate that revenue in a more deliberate manner across verticals. On an organic basis, Building Infrastructure grew 6%, Transportation grew 10%, Power and Utilities grew 13% and Natural Resources & Imaging grew around 1%. In previous quarterly calls, we've been asked about the relative gross margins of our primary verticals. We've suggested we believe they are relatively equal apart from Transportation, which has a lower contribution margin based on the nature of its primarily cost-plus contracts. To corroborate this assertion, we calculated the gross margin of each vertical for the third quarter, during which gross margin was 53% and concluded that our representation was accurate. During the quarter, gross margins by vertical were 56% for both Building Infrastructure and Power and Utilities, 57% for Natural Resources & Imaging and 46% for Transportation. With Building Infrastructure, gross margin is benefited by more fixed fee contracting. With Natural Resources & Imaging, gross margin is advantaged from a disproportionate use of labor leveraging technology. With Transportation, we enjoy meaningfully longer and larger government contracts that have lower labor multipliers, but generally generate higher utilizations and overhead leverage along with lower turnover costs. We will include this gross margin analysis in our quarterly presentations going forward. We ended the quarter with a record $448 million backlog, up 18% year-over-year, with 38% of that backlog from Building Infrastructure, 30% for Transportation, 23% from Power and Utilities and 9% from Natural Resources & Imaging. This imbalance relative to revenue should indicate continuing diversification of our revenue mix, but it's likely not as dramatic as the percentages in backlog today reflect. Operating cash flow totaled $10.2 million for the quarter and sits at $26.5 million year-to-date, both more than twice last year's levels. While we are pleased with this significant increase in conversion, we're confident there is room for continuing improvement. Our balance sheet remains a strength and provides a solid foundation for growth. We ended the quarter with $16 million in cash and $57 million drawn on our revolver and net debt of approximately $105 million with a net leverage ratio of 1.5x trailing 12 months adjusted EBITDA. After quarter end, we expanded our revolver to $210 million from $140 million, adding PNC Bank to the existing Bank of America and TD Bank syndicate. As a result, we have roughly $150 million in available liquidity for investment in growth initiatives. Our internal innovation incubator, the BIG Fund, continues to produce high-value ideas and opportunities that present the prospect of tangible returns for us long term. We're actively engaged in advancing concepts that accelerate revenue growth through the deployment of proprietary AI-enabled asset control kits, which extend engagement with clients throughout the asset lifecycle. With concepts that expand the application of the proprietary technology tools we acquired in the recent ORCaS acquisition, which drastically reduced the time it takes to perform repetitive feasibility and planning functions, thereby unlocking additional labor utilization. Also concepts that connect all Bowman operating systems and platforms with AI-enabled capabilities, which empower employees to ask Bowman plain English questions, the timely informed answers to which improved business acquisition efforts and streamline proposal generation, estimation and profitable project execution. Lastly, we're working on ideas that modify, extend and evolve the inherent capabilities and uses of our high-end geospatial assets to expand their applications, improve the quality of capture, extend revenue opportunities, shorten delivery times and increase return on investment. All investments in innovation are measured against defined return thresholds, ensuring innovation spending meets the same rigorous financial discipline as acquisitions. To date, we have expended a little bit over $300,000 on advancing these ideas, the cost of which are not added back to adjusted EBITDA and the benefits of which are not yet contemplated in our current projections. And while not a BIG Fund project, we also completed the upgrade of our accounting and enterprise management platform this quarter, an effort that consumed a meaningful amount of time and energy, but will be a solid foundation for our next phase of growth. These costs will likewise not add back to adjusted EBITDA. It wouldn't be an earnings call if I didn't reference tax, so here it goes. Following enactment of OB3, we filed method change notifications with the IRS that allowed us to unwind our uncertain tax position with retroactive audit protection. The change in law and associated adoption by Bowman of the new standards released approximately $52 million of deferred tax assets and other non-current liabilities on our balance sheet and released $3.5 million in P&I accruals, which had previously run through the tax expense. In addition to committing to GAAP profitability and cash flow conversion, we also committed to the reduction of non-cash stock compensation as a percentage of revenue. For the first 9 months of 2025, stock-based compensation totaled $14.2 million or 4.4% of net service billing, down from 7.3% a year earlier. Excluding about $1 million of pre-IPO related issuances, adjusted stock-based compensation was approximately 4.1% of net revenue. As we've discussed in the past, these pre-IPO grant expenses represent the run out of GAAP costs related to awards issued prior to our IPO in 2021 and are not part of normalized long-term incentive costs. We expect total non-cash stock compensation for 2025 and '26 to be roughly $19 million and $20.5 million, respectively, which is consistent with our pledge to reduce equity compensation as a percentage of revenue while balancing its benefits for recruiting, retention and efficient capital allocation. Thank you for your continued confidence in Bowman. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Gary.