Thanks, John. Good morning, everyone. Before I get into numbers, I'd like to take a moment to welcome Brian Butler to our team as Vice President of Investor Relations. Brian joins us from Stifel, where he was most recently the Lead Equity Research Analyst for the Waste sector. And as Michael Hoffman's longtime partner, he was one of the most tenured Waste analysts on Wall Street. He brings deep corporate finance skills, industry knowledge, and investment perspective to our team. We're very excited to have Brian join the Casella team. Now on to the financial results for the quarter. Revenues in the first quarter were $417.1 million, up $76.1 million year-over-year or 22.3%, with $57.3 million from acquisitions, including the rollover and $18.4 million of growth from organic growth or 5.4% year-over-year. Solid Waste revenues were up 25.9% year-over-year, with prices up 5.6% and volumes slightly down, down 1.7%. Within Solid Waste, pricing and collection line of business was up 5.8% with volumes down 1.7%. Price was strong across the board, led by a positive 6.5% price in the Front Load Commercial business. From a volume standpoint, we saw softness in the roll-off line of business across our footprint this quarter. Some of this can certainly be attributed to the challenging winter weather in the Northeast, but we also observed some slower economic activity in several of our markets. However, it's hard to draw firm conclusions from the first quarter roll-off volumes as we're seeing nice strength in seasonal uptick into April and early May. Price in the disposal line of business was up 5.5% year-over-year and volumes were down 2.2% with softness in third-party transfer station volumes, which is really related to soft roll-off volumes in the quarter. Results in the Landfill business were strong with prices up 3.3% and tons up 3.9%, including volumes across all major waste streams. The average price per ton was up 4.8% in the quarter. Resource Solutions' revenues were up 9.5% year-over-year with recycling and other processing revenue up 7.4% and National Accounts up 10.9%. Within the processing operations, price was up 3%, with average commodity revenue per ton relatively flat year-over-year. Commodity prices overall remained stable this year, with recent softness in the fiber market, largely offset by strength in plastics and aluminum. Processing volume in revenue terms was up 2.6% with growth in both recycling and municipal biosolids processing. Within National Accounts revenue, price was up 3.9% and volume was up 7.4%. Adjusted EBITDA was $86.4 million in the quarter, up $15.4 million or 21.7% year-over-year with positive contribution from acquisitions and organic growth. Adjusted EBITDA margins were 20.7% in the quarter, down 10 basis points year-over-year, but in line with our budget. Bridging the year-over-year change in adjusted EBITDA margins in the quarter, an adjustment to long-term stock-based compensation expense, driven by our improving outlook against long-term targets, impacted EBITDA in the quarter by approximately $2.6 million, which represents about 60 basis points of margin headwind. Excluding this adjustment, margins were up approximately 50 basis points year-over-year with margin expansion in the base business and the net tailwind from acquired operations. Cost of operations were $280.5 million in the quarter, up $49.7 million year-over-year, with $44.4 million of the increase from acquisitions and $5.3 million in the base business. Cost of operations in the base business were down approximately 200 basis points as a percentage of revenue in the quarter, primarily reflecting the continued operating leverage and benefits from our key strategies in the collection line of business. General and administrative costs were $56.5 million in the quarter, up $12.2 million year-over-year. Excluding the stock-comp adjustment I just mentioned, G&A costs were down 10 basis points as a percentage of revenues. Depreciation and amortization costs were up $17.5 million year-over-year with $15.5 million resulting from the recent acquisition activity, including the amortization of acquired intangibles. As a reference, D&A associated with acquisitions was approximately 27% of acquired revenues in the quarter as compared to about 16% in our base business. Adjusted net income was $12.2 million in the quarter, or $0.19 per diluted share, up $3.5 million or about $0.04 a share. GAAP net loss was $4.8 million in the quarter, impacted by about $6.9 million of increase in amortization of acquired intangibles year-over-year. Net cash provided by operating activities was $50.1 million in the first quarter, up $42.4 million year-over-year, driven by strong EBITDA growth and a more normalized seasonal working capital outflow as compared to last year. Our DSO was steady at 36 days from December 31st. As you may have noted last night in the press release, adjusted free cash flow was $29.1 million, a record for the first quarter. Capital expenditures were $55.5 million, up $25.2 million year-over-year, but included $25 million of upfront investments in recent acquisitions in line with our full-year plan and the pro formas for each transaction. As of March 31st, we had $1.15 billion of debt and $268 million of cash and our consolidated net leverage ratio for purposes of our bank covenants was 2.45 times. As of today, after the recent acquisitions completed thus far in 2025, we maintain approximately $900 million of availability between excess cash and our undrawn revolver. Our liquidity and leverage profile will enable us to be opportunistic in continuing to execute our growth strategy and robust M&A pipeline. As announced in our press release yesterday, we reaffirmed our financial guidance for 2025. We started the year strong, but it would be premature if we consider our initial guidance ranges, particularly in light of the heightened macroeconomic uncertainty. Regarding the economic outlook, we believe that our exposure to tariffs is low, as John mentioned, given the nature of our cost structure, we've seen virtually no efforts by vendors to date to pass on tariff-related increases, but we're closely monitoring the situation and we're in dialog with key vendors to understand potential impacts as the situation evolves. In the event that we do face tariff-related cost increases, we have multiple options to offset such tariffs on the revenue side. Now moving on to the operations highlights for the quarter. As discussed by John earlier and in the financial dialog, organic operating trends were very positive in the first quarter as mid-single-digit pricing combined with new business wins in our Resource Solutions group and cost-efficiency gains from operational initiatives offset headwinds from lower collection and transfer station volumes in the quarter. From an operating standpoint, we continue to execute well on our core programs, including automated truck conversions, route optimizations, and extra revenues generated through our onboard computing. Our 2025 plan includes adding approximately 40 more automated trucks eliminating over 50 rear-load trucks. As a comparison, in 2024, we added 17 automated trucks, which eliminated 22 rear loaders. After completing a full technology retrofit during the second half of 2024, we brought our Willimantic recycling facility back online in January. The facility is performing well and is on track to deliver $4 million of targeted incremental adjusted EBITDA in 2025. We continue to evaluate other opportunities to advance our recycling and resource management infrastructure with several additional facilities that could potentially benefit from conversions in the coming years. Our sales team remained diligent in the first quarter, successfully winning $22 million in new annualized revenues with premier customers in key market segments, including municipal, industrial, multisite retail, and high institutional and higher education. Overall, new business growth remained strong in the first quarter, slightly ahead of our 2025 goals. Our Resource Solutions business also delivered strong revenue growth with first quarter National Accounts volumes increasing 7.4% year-over-year, given the strong sales efforts. Landfill volumes showed improvement in the first quarter, up 3.9% year-over-year as the C&D market headwinds that we experienced in 2024 have subsided and we've begun to see the benefits of a revamped landfill sales process and our efforts to increase internalization of volumes. We expect that these positive tailwinds will remain throughout the remainder of 2025. Acquisitions remain a strategic priority for our team with a focus on opportunities that have great operational fit, allowing us to advance the densification of routes, drive margin improvement through application of our key operating strategies, and establishing new adjacent markets that support future growth. Our active M&A pipeline is over $500 million of revenues in various stages of engagement. As we look ahead, we remain very well-positioned to deliver attractive organic growth combined with strategic acquisitions. We have limited exposure to tariffs and a resilient business model in the event that the economy does slow. With that, I'd like to turn it back to the operator for questions.