Thank you, Jeff. Starting with commercial lines, net premiums written increased 7.1% during the quarter, with the execution of our go-forward strategy producing positive momentum in new business and strong renewal rate achievement that exceeded intentional attrition related to our non-renewal of less profitable business as we discussed in prior quarters. At June 30th, we had essentially completed our exit of commercial lines business in Georgia and Alabama. We are very excited to achieve this significant milestone in the execution of our profit improvement initiatives. Excluding these two states, our commercial lines net premium written growth was 10.4% for the second quarter. Our success in writing new business is highly aligned with the targeted geographic and class of business strategies that I have outlined previously. In fact, 66% of the new business we wrote during the quarter was within highly targeted classes where we expect higher profitability, which exceeded our target of 60% and improved over 59% for the prior-year quarter. We have continued to execute several other profit improvement initiatives within our commercial lines book of business, including: the introduction of a Probable Maximum Loss underwriting tools that now provide, to our underwriters, a comprehensive analysis of fire risk factors as they review and price commercial properties; revised underwriting guidelines for certain profit-challenged classes of business; and the introduction of mandatory wind/hail deductibles across our footprint, whether or not a state has been historically identified as a CAT-prone state. We're also taking further actions to increase the precision of our risk selection and pricing, such as using third-party data to ensure appropriate property valuations, utilizing aerial imagery for roof evaluations, and integrating advanced catastrophe modeling to drive appropriate changes to terms and conditions on more exposed properties. We are continuing to emphasize renewal rate increases in areas that are most challenged when considering the intersections of class, line of business, and geography. Excluding workers' compensation, we achieved an average of 11.8% renewal rate and exposure increase across our commercial lines book, led by commercial multi-peril at 13.8% and commercial auto at 10.2%. Turning from top-line growth to results, the commercial lines statutory combined ratio for the second quarter was 104.9%, a slight deterioration from 103.6% for the prior-year quarter due primarily to the impact of a very active weather pattern during this quarter as Jeff and Kevin mentioned earlier. There was a tornado or hail event reported somewhere in the United States in every day during the month of May. So, we are not surprised that weather-related losses were elevated during the quarter, with commercial property losses from weather increasing 90% over the prior-year quarter, primarily due to a handful of severe claims from tornadoes and large hail in the states of Michigan, Indiana, Ohio and South Carolina. Despite this increase, we believe our ongoing geographic diversification strategy served us well, as the weather impact on our loss ratio was significantly lower than other companies across the industry have reported. It also bears mentioning that we received no claims to date related to Hurricane Beryl. Large commercial fire losses incurred were relatively flat for the quarter, and we expect a reduction in the likelihood of large fires going forward as we continue to execute on specific actions to mitigate fire peril risk. Within our workers' compensation line of business, we added to our loss reserves for prior accident years, primarily related to higher medical loss estimates on previously reported claims in our flagship state of Pennsylvania. These adjustments relate in large part to medical developments requiring longer treatments within individual cases, as we continue to see relatively stable medical inflation trends. Both commercial auto and commercial multi-peril lines experienced favorable reserve development that essentially offset the workers' compensation development. We are closely monitoring our reserving activity across all lines of business and are continuing to analyze the underlying factors that drove the unusual increase in workers' compensation reserves. Drilling down into loss trends for commercial auto, we believe the post-pandemic increases in claims frequency have abated and have noted moderation in auto physical damage severity increases as well. Liability severity remained generally in-line with historical levels. For commercial multi-peril, overall severity appears to be moderating, and favorable frequency trends continue. We are continuing to see upward pressure on liability severity trends, but that increase has been partially offset by favorable frequency trends for this line. We are continuing to execute our offensive strategy in Commercial Lines, and we are pleased that our small business initiatives continue to gain traction. We expect to see further improvements in our straight through processing and hit rates on our new and improved small commercial products and service offerings going forward. Shifting to our personal lines business segment, we achieved a 12.1% increase in net premiums written for the second quarter, primarily driven by a continuation of aggressive premium rate increases, coupled with strong policy retention. Personal auto and homeowners rate and exposure increases were 13.4% and 16.3%, respectively, for the current quarter. We are now seeing earned rate increases relative to responsive actions we took beginning as early as 2022. Earned rate increase levels are now exceeding loss cost trends, resulting in margin expansion for the personal lines segment. Our strategy remains to accelerate our return to profitability by actively controlling new business volume, which led to a 3.7% decline in policies in force compared to a year ago and a 2.3% decline from year-end 2023. Policyholders are accepting higher renewal premiums, with our real retention remaining strong and consistent at 89.1% for the quarter. Premium retention also continued to be very strong at 104.7% for the quarter, again driven by rate increases in all states. The personal lines auto loss ratio improved by 6.5 percentage points from the prior-year period, driven by core loss ratio improvement and a continuation of favorable prior year reserve development that contributed to a profitable 95.6% statutory combined ratio for the quarter. Similar to commercial auto, we are seeing moderating increases in auto physical damage severity, as used car prices and parts prices have begun to level off. Claim frequency trends have shifted from post-pandemic increases to moderate decreases as well. Furthermore, liability claim severity remained relatively stable during the current quarter. The homeowners loss ratio deteriorated by nearly 4 percentage points, due to the unusually active tornado and hail season I mentioned earlier, while non-weather trends continue to be largely in check. The statutory combined ratio for the quarter was 103.1%, with no impact from prior year reserve development. We are making solid progress in diversifying the geographic spread of risk in our property book, reducing exposures by 8.8% in geographies we have identified as more prone to severe weather and growing modestly in other areas we view as less weather prone. We're pleased to see the improvement in our personal lines underwriting results due to many strategic actions we have taken across our portfolio, and we remain confident in our ability to maintain that positive momentum as we continue to execute on our strategies. With that, I will turn the call over to Dan DeLamater. Dan?