Thank you, Bryan. In terms of Lawson's performance for the quarter, we saw great progress on many fronts, including strong growth in our strategic customer relationships; continued growth in our Kent Automotive business, in particular, multisite locations; the relocation of our Western Canadian distribution center more than doubling its square footage size from 43,000 square feet to over 100,000 square feet; the continuation of our investments in the 3 initiatives of market segmentation, Torrent part washers and state and local and education initiative; our ability to manage through a tough inflationary environment while generating additional gross margin dollars to offset various cost increases; strong sales and EBITDA performance by the Bolt Supply House; and we exceeded our first quarter expectations even with increased costs in certain areas of the business, which I'll cover more in a moment. So let's start with some of the key financial takeaways for the quarter and then I'll jump into some of the details. First, consolidated sales improved by $14.3 million to $117.9 million on 1 additional selling day this quarter. Average daily sales increased 12% versus a year ago quarter and improved 8.3% over the fourth quarter of 2021. Second, our consolidated gross margin increased $5.9 million. We have proactively managed margins this quarter despite the global supply chain issues in the marketplace and inflationary pressures that we are all experiencing. And third, reported operating income was $12.1 million for the quarter compared to $4.8 million a year ago. On an adjusted basis, our EBITDA was $9.2 million, up $745,000 over the fourth quarter of 2021 and up slightly over $9.1 million a year ago quarter despite being burdened with higher labor costs, including higher health insurance claims coming out of COVID. As we reflect on the first quarter, sales continued to sequentially improve in the Lawson and Bolt business as does our sales rep productivity. Most product categories realized sequential daily sales increases over the fourth quarter. We continue to make great progress in this environment and continue our focus on driving sales, protecting our margins, cost control and generating strong cash flows. We are excited to celebrate our 70th year anniversary as an organization. Over the past 70 years, the company has been built through strong customer relationships that rely upon us for our services, products and expertise. This has become more evident as labor markets continue to tighten and our customers look to us to supplement their labor needs. Partnering with Lawson will ensure that they continue to operate in the most efficient manner and reduce their downtime. During the first quarter, average daily sales were $1.751 million in January, $1.833 million in February and $1.933 million in March. The integrated Lawson Partsmaster business realized strong sequential growth during the quarter. Additionally, the Bolt Supply House set another all-time record sales month for March on top of a record sales month realized just last November. We estimate that of the 13.8% sales increase versus a year ago, approximately 9% is price related. For the quarter, the Lawson Partsmaster MRO business grew 12.1%, while both supply sales increased nearly 27%, driven by success within their branches and a recovery of their corporate sales primarily to oil and gas customers. We continue to realize strong sales within the Strategic and Kent side of the business, up approximately 25% and 27%, respectively, versus a year ago quarter. Consolidated gross margin for the quarter came in at 51.3% compared to 52.7% a year ago and 52.9% in the fourth quarter of 2021. On a stand-alone basis, before the classification of certain service-related costs into gross margin, the Lawson Partsmaster MRO margin was 58.2% in Q1 compared to 59.9% in Q4 and 59.4% a year ago quarter. Excluding the movement in noncash inventory reserves, Q1 gross margins were within 100 bps from Q4, driven by a sales mix shift towards larger, lower-margin profile customers and increased vendor transportation and labor costs that we are all experiencing. Our gross margin percentage was also negatively affected by approximately 50 bps due to the strong sales within our strategic customer base, which do have lower margins. While our actions allowed us to create $5.9 million of additional gross margin dollars over a year ago, the recovery of these rising costs on a dollar basis actually narrows the overall margin percentage slightly. We remain strategically focused on growing our gross margin dollars and being diligent in managing through the related inflationary supply chain and labor shortage impacts. While we are pleased with our overall margin percentages for the first quarter of 2022, we are experiencing challenges to access certain products like everyone else in the industry. Our customer backorders and service level metrics have improved sequentially from Q4 to Q1. However, they are not yet back to our normalized levels. We are adjusting our actions to manage through this unusual period. We remain confident in our ability to navigate through this unusual time. However, we do expect that many types of these challenges may continue throughout the remainder of 2022. For the quarter, total operating expenses were $48.4 million compared to $49.8 million a year ago and $54.8 million in the fourth quarter. The first quarter of 2022 includes approximately $5 million of net nonoperating benefits related to the mark-to-market accounting for stock-based compensation, offset by severance costs and costs related to Lawson's business combination with TestEquity and Gexpro Services. Excluding these nonrecurring items, adjusted operating expenses were up $5.2 million compared to the year ago quarter, primarily driven by higher compensation to support higher sales, the return of more customer-facing selling activities, planned upfront investments to grow sales by expanding our channels to market and increased health insurance costs. Let me take a moment and comment on our health insurance claims briefly. For the quarter, our net health insurance costs rose approximately $1.5 million or 50% versus a year ago. This was driven by an increase in the number of larger claims as well as the frequency and severity of non-large claims. Many of the trends that we experienced in this quarter are not inconsistent with the rise in health claims throughout most industries coming out of COVID. Historically, for Lawson, this tends to smooth out over the year. However, the increase that we experienced this quarter negatively impacted our first quarter 2022 adjusted EBITDA margins by approximately 125 basis points. Our reported operating income was $12.1 million for the first quarter compared to $4.8 million a year ago. On an adjusted basis, including nonoperating items, non-GAAP operating income was $7.1 million for the quarter compared to $6.1 million in Q4 of 2021 and $7.2 million in the first quarter of 2021. Adjusted EBITDA as a percent of sales was 7.8% for the first quarter. On an adjusted basis, excluding stock-based compensation, severance and acquisition costs, diluted EPS was $0.57 for the quarter versus $0.52 in the fourth quarter of 2021 and $0.58 in the year ago quarter. Capital expenditures for the quarter were approximately $2.1 million, including work being performed to expand our Suwanee distribution center capabilities, information technology investments and the purchase of Torrent part washing machines. As an organization, we continue to make investments in the business, in particular, areas that have a direct impact on sales. While the ongoing uncertainties and unevenness from the pandemic recovery and the related supply chain challenges continued, we were still able to generate improvements in the business while balancing our cost structure against our sales trends. We ended the quarter in a net borrowing position of $10 million with $83.4 million of availability under our previous $100 million committed credit facility. Before I turn the call back over to Bryan, let me thank the entire Lawson team. We've had significant activities taking place on many fronts to drive our business forward, including managing through the lingering effects of the pandemic and more extensive inflation and supply chain challenges than most of us have ever faced. The team continues to work through these challenges to make us stronger for our customers, our employees and our shareholders. Thank you for all of your commitment to the company. As Bryan mentioned at the beginning of the call, we will be conducting an additional call on May 5 at 11 a.m. Eastern Time to discuss the strategic combination that closed on April 1 between Lawson, TestEquity and Gexpro services. We look forward to that discussion and being able to answer questions at that time. I'll now turn it back over to Bryan.