Thanks, Jan. This was another good quarter and that we were able to improve our funding mix, one of our strategic goals. During the quarter, our efforts to gather deposits organically met with success as deposits increased by $658 million. This increase was led by savings and money market accounts, up $339 million and time deposits up $255 million. At the same time broker deposits declined by $38 million and were down to 29.6% of deposits. With deposits up $658 million we took the opportunity to reduce our higher cost borrowings by paying down 100% of our FHLB advances. BTFP borrowings, which have a more attractive rate and collateral requirements remain unchanged. On the balance sheet, our mix of deposits and borrowings at quarter-end is now much closer to how it looked at the end of December before the market disruption in March. During the quarter, deposits climbed to $8.4 billion, compared to $8.7 billion at the end of 2022. And short-term borrowings were reduced to $1.3 billion, compared to $975 million at year-end. One item, though, that continues to change is the move by deposit customers into interest bearing accounts. For the quarter, average non-interest-bearing deposits were down $310 million or 12.1%, and interest-bearing deposits were up $742 million or 12.5% of a much bigger base. For the quarter, average non-interest bearing deposits were 25% of deposits down from 30% the prior quarter. Customers seeking out higher interest bearing accounts and a rate increase across most of all our product lines at the end of July shortly after the Fed raised rates by 25 basis points combined to increase our cost of funds by 19 basis points to 3.39%. This is a much lower increase than the prior quarter's increase of 58 basis points. As we are talking about cost of funds, I'll continue with commentary on our margin. This quarter net interest income was down $1.1 million and the net interest margin was 2.43%, down 6 basis points. Interest income was adversely impacted by a reversal of $1.6 million because of the one multifamily loan in the District of Columbia entering nonperforming status in the quarter. This reversal reduced our margin by 6 basis points and accounts for all the change from the prior quarter. Before moving on to the income statement, we experienced loan growth this quarter with loans up $150 million. But some of that was timing of existing construction loans funding at quarter end. This was the reason for the reversal of the provision on unfunded commitments. Even with the increase in loans, the strong growth in deposits drove our loan to deposit ratio down to 95% from 101% the prior quarter. Looking at the bottom line, net income was $27.4 million for the quarter compared to $28.7 million in the prior quarter. This stabilization of earnings is a result of our targeted efforts to improve the balance sheet mix, reduce the rate of expense growth and maintain our strong asset quality metrics, which are reflected in the provision for credit losses. Additionally, as we mentioned last quarter, there was a lag in Fed rate changes impacting interest income on loans as compared to interest expense on deposits. As the Fed has slowed the pace of rate increases, the benefit from the variable-rate loans resetting higher and from new loans at market rates is beginning to reduce the gap versus Interest expense changes. Other items impacting the quarter-over-quarter earnings were noninterest income, which was down primarily because the prior quarter included non-recurring income of $2.8 million from an SBIC fund. And non-interest expense showed improvement down $345,000 from the prior quarter primarily due to lower overall expenses offset by higher FDIC fees, which were up $761,000 from the prior quarter on higher assessment fees. In regards to expenses, we have always prided ourselves on being highly efficient and we aim to continue to operate in that manner. We recognize that we will need to invest in the company over the next several quarters to achieve our strategic goals. But we do not expect a meaningful increase in the run rate of expenses in 2024, due to cost savings we've realized year-to-date. This past quarter efficiency was 48.8%, which compares well to our proxy peers. Lastly, capital remains a core strength of the company. Our tangible common equity ratio at quarter end was 10.04%, which was higher than all but one of our proxy peers last quarter. And in terms of liquidity, we improved our aggregate borrowing capacity to $2.26 billion, which gives us the financial flexibility to provide the support and services our customers expect. With that, I'll hand it back to Susan for a short wrap up. Susan?