Thank you, Heath. Operating net income declined by $1.1 million in the first quarter, due largely in part to normal seasonal declines in a few of our noninterest income lines of business, particularly SBSL, which we mentioned on last quarter's call and was expected and not unusual. Pipelines for both mortgage and SBSL have increased, indicating more revenue opportunity as we move forward into a period with higher seasonal activity. Pre-provision net revenue increased almost $1.5 million on an operating basis when compared to the first quarter of 2024, and this highlights the continued improvement in our core earning fundamentals. Net interest income increased by approximately $480,000 in the first quarter both loan growth and a reduction in our cost of funds were contributing factors. Our loan growth was primarily in the later half of the quarter, so we should see a positive impact to earning asset yields in the second quarter. Our cost of funds for the quarter was 2.07%, which is about a 12 basis point decline from the previous quarter and a 25 basis point decline from the third quarter of 2024. The majority of our deposit growth was in low-cost transactional DDA accounts, which has been and continues to be a focus area on deposits. Margin increased 9 basis points to 2.93%. That's up from 2.84% in the prior quarter. We still expect to see modest increases in margin throughout the remainder of 2025 given our current rate environment outlook. First quarter operating non-interest income decreased about $1.7 million and was driven by decreased activity in our SBSL division, where revenues fell by $1.6 million. The fourth quarter was a great quarter for our SBSL team, and we mentioned that we would see lighter revenues in the first quarter. Activity has picked up in the SBSL pipeline, so we should see more production and sales revenue in upcoming quarters. Revenues in our mortgage division were slightly higher and expenses slightly lower in the quarter, and the division was profitable. Deposit service charge-related revenue and interchange fees were down about $220,000, and this is due to a shorter quarter with fewer days. Non-interest expenses decreased around $1 million in the quarter and was related to decreases in variable expenses based on activity as well as lower advertising and donation expenses. As you may remember, we had about $450,000 in community-related donations through state tax credit programs during the last quarter, and that was in the fourth quarter of 2024. Our net NIE to average assets was 1.44% in the quarter, an increase from 1.35% in the prior quarter. And last quarter, we mentioned that we would likely see an increase and that we were targeting around 1.45% in our forecast. We expect net NIE to remain around this level, which is still well below our peer median. Our effective tax rate for the quarter was a little over 20%, which was in line with our guidance from last quarter where we mentioned a 21% ETR for 2025. Provision expense totaled $1.5 million, and the increase is related to our loan growth. Net charge-offs were $606,000, which is consistent with levels observed during the first half of last year. We expect future quarters to remain within this range, although there may be some variability driven by our SBSL division. Non-performing assets were $12.4 million, classified loans were $26.4 million and criticized loans were $55.8 million. We feel that these are still at historically low levels and balances are not driven by any systemic credit issues that cause concern. We've had a few isolated issues in agricultural production lines and trucking loans, but they represent a small portion of our portfolio and balances are relatively low compared to loans as a whole. Committed ag production lines represent around 1.5% of the portfolio with 0.8% outstanding and trucking is about 0.63% of the loan portfolio. Our CRE loans and other loan types are still performing well from a credit perspective and past dues have remained at low levels. We had two CRE past dues at the end of the quarter totaling less than $200,000. Loans held for investment increased $78.3 million. We mentioned last quarter that we expected to see loan growth in 2025, and that started earlier than we were forecasting. Fewer expected payoffs also contributed to that growth. Our pipeline is still strong, and we expect to see continued loan growth this year, but it may not be at the same levels that we saw this quarter. We feel good about the rates and the credit we are seeing on deals and loan production is expected to drive an increase in our loan yields this year. Our new and renewed loan weighted average rate is highlighted on Slide 27, and that was 7.72% for the quarter. Total deposits increased $54.6 million in the quarter as we remain focused on the deposit-first culture. Slide 22 in the investor presentation outlines our deposit mix and illustrates the decline we've seen in our cost of interest-bearing deposits over the last two quarters. We're still seeing cooling deposit competition across our footprint, which we think will help keep cost pressures minimal. As previously discussed, we typically experience seasonal fluctuations in our deposit base with runoff beginning around this time of year, particularly within our municipal and agricultural-related deposits. This may slow the rate of decrease on our cost of funds and could have an impact on how much increase in margin we see. Our cash to assets was a little over 7% at the end of the quarter, which gives us room to continue funding loan growth. Our cash flow from the bond portfolio is expected to be around $80 million to $90 million for the remainder of the year based on our base case modeling. This is without any investment sales. We mentioned last quarter a pause on investment sales, but given our loan growth and outlook, we may resume sales in upcoming quarters. Those would be at levels similar to the transactions we did each quarter in 2024. During the quarter, we repurchased 38,000 shares at an average price of $16.45 as part of our stock repurchase program. Additional repurchases could be likely going forward as market conditions and volatility could provide us with the opportunity to purchase shares at attractive levels. Additionally, yesterday, the Board declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.115 per share. Our previous shelf registration from 2021 has expired, and we plan on going through the process to have an active shelf in place for future flexibility and capital management. Slide 13 provides a breakdown of pre-tax income for our complementary lines of business. Again, it was a seasonally lighter quarter for many of our lines, but we anticipate activity to pick up. We’re still seeing good progress on referrals and pipelines, and so we’re optimistic about the future performance in our complementary lines of business. That concludes my overview. And now I’ll turn it back over to Heath for any final comments before we take questions.