Thanks, Heath. I'll start off with our earnings for the quarter. On a GAAP basis, net income decreased around $265,000, but excluding the loss on security sales, operating net income increased about $376,000. Interest income increased from the prior quarter, but was slightly outpaced by the increase in interest expense, which led to a decline in net interest income of about $220,000. This led to a slight margin decrease of 1 basis point from 2.70% in the prior quarter to 2.69% this quarter. The margin decline was a little less than our expectations, as Heath mentioned earlier, and we still do expect to see some margin decline in the 3 to 5 basis point range before we start seeing any expansion. We have been seeing some slowdown in the increase of our cost of interest-bearing liabilities. That was 2.58% in the first quarter, up 8 basis points from the fourth quarter. To compare, the increase from the third quarter of '23 to the fourth quarter of '23 was 24 basis points from 2.26% to 2.50%. If interest rates stay where they are for a while, we'll continue to see our cost of funds increase, but we expect it to be at a slower pace than what we saw throughout 2023. On an operating basis, noninterest income increased $973,000 during the first quarter. This was primarily a result of an increase in SBA gain and related fee income of $535,000, and is related to the increased gains from the newer small dollar loan product. Net service charge and fee income was slightly down due to fewer days during the quarter, and revenue from both wealth and insurance showed some small increases from the prior quarter. Our BOLI income did increase quarter-over-quarter, but was a result of a onetime claim payout in the first quarter. Noninterest expense totaled $20.4 million, and most of that increase was in employee compensation and benefits. The first quarter is when we see annual salary increases go into effect. We typically see more payroll taxes at the beginning of the year and 401(k) match resets. On last quarter's call, we mentioned that we would likely see an increase in expenses in the first quarter and that we were still targeting that 1.40% net NIE to assets. Operating net NIE to assets was 1.38% in the first quarter, and we see it being around that 1.40% range for the next few quarters. Total noninterest expense of around $20 million is what we're expecting on a go-forward basis, but it could be slightly higher based on activity. And we would anticipate that, that be set with noninterest income. Provision expense totaled $1 million for the quarter. Net charge-offs were slightly down quarter-over-quarter. Total nonperforming loans decreased $3.8 million, from $10.2 million last quarter to $6.4 million this quarter. Of the $665,000 of net charge-offs, $535,000 of that was from the unguaranteed portion of SBA loans in our SPSL division. The small dollar express loans, which are 85% guaranteed, had slightly higher losses, but they also have higher premiums when sold. We've recently tightened our underwriting a little on these and are still seeing good volume. So we think they're going to be a good product long term. Total loans held for investment decreased $24.5 million from the prior quarter. However, as Heath mentioned earlier, our quarterly average is down only about $3 million. Overall loan demand has slowed, but the driver for this quarter was primarily the sale of $8 million of portfolio mortgages for a $84,000 gain, and payoffs close to $10 million in loans that no longer matched our credit standards. Based on our current pipeline, we still expect modest loan growth this year. And on the last call, we said that we expected to see that pick up in the latter half of the year, and that's still what we're anticipating. Total deposits declined $22 million and was due to the payoff of $34.5 million of broker deposits. We grew customer core deposits by $12.5 million, and that still remains a primary focus area for us. Additionally, we paid down FHLB borrowings by $20 million during the quarter and in doing so, further reduced our reliance on higher cost funding. We did not have any outstanding overnight borrowings and still maintain a strong liquidity position. The overall value of our investments portfolio increased and led to an increase in OCI of about $1.3 million quarter-over-quarter. We did sell investment securities for $555,000 loss during the quarter, and a few details about that are highlighted on Slide 33 in the investor presentation. The fair value of those securities was around $8.6 million with a book yield of 2.05%. Our conservative estimates put that earn back at about 2 years, but could be shorter if deployed into loans. It's likely that we will do some more restructuring going forward and those transactions would probably be of a somewhat similar size. The portfolio mortgage sales, paydowns on wholesale funding and investment in security sales are all part of our prudent balance sheet management strategy. And we feel that continuing to optimize our funding mix alongside restructuring underperforming assets, puts us in a better position for overall margin improvement. Mortgage is still seeing stable production relative to the higher rate environment. The first quarter pretax profit was around breakeven and a big improvement over the first quarter of last year. In our SPSL division, the smaller express loans are doing well and offsetting some of the slowdown we've seen for the larger SBA loans. And we continue to see improvement in our start-up complementary lines of business. The breakdown of income on a pretax basis is on Slide 9. Marine and RV lending is seasonal, and we're just getting into the prime season now. However, we see considerable improvement when compared to the first quarter of 2023. Heading into the 2024 season, we've almost tripled the number of dealers in our network when compared to the end of March last year. And we've recently implemented auto decisioning software, which is aligned with our underwriting guidelines and enables us to quickly respond to dealers in our network. Merchant Services has also made great progress when compared to the first quarter of last year. The total number of customers are up 46% since last March. The total number of quarterly transactions were up 92% in the first quarter of '24 compared to the first quarter of '23. And the total quarterly volume is up 75% compared to the first quarter of '23. Volume continues to increase, and we have the capacities to significantly grow revenue with our current resources without adding a lot of additional expense. We also see this as a great lead product in developing full customer relationships with potential customers. Colony wealth advisers continues to add revenue and increase assets under management, and we see a lot of opportunity ahead. And for Colony Insurance, we recently expanded our product offerings by adding a life insurance specialist to the team. We feel adding life insurance to our list of products allows us to better serve our customers and generate additional revenue. That concludes my overview, and now I'll turn it back over to Heath for any final comments before we take questions.