Thank you, Kate. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. First quarter net income available to common shareholders was $11.7 million or $0.76 per diluted share, consistent with the linked quarter and down from the prior year period when the company reported $14.6 million or $0.93 per diluted share. The year-over-year decline was primarily the result of higher provision for credit losses and an increase in expenses compared to the year ago period, driven in part by investments in talent. Before turning the call over to Jack for more detail on our financial performance and our expectations for the remainder of the year, I would like to provide some insights in context on the health of our balance sheet. Given the recent bank values, increased volatility and broad brush commentary by the financial media, it's appropriate to provide a company-specific update. On the funding side, deposits totaled $5.1 billion at March 31, up 4.3% from December 31. As a reminder, we have a substantial public deposit portfolio associated with local municipalities. And balances are typically higher in the first quarter as a result of seasonality associated with inflows from tax payments and state funding. Reciprocal deposits were also up during the quarter as this has become an attractive option affording our larger customers the benefit of FDIC insurance on accounts greater than $250,000. Given the interest rate environment, we continue to see disintermediation from core transaction-type accounts to time deposits in both our non-public and public deposit portfolios, which has impacted margin as non-public time deposit balances increased $89 million on a linked quarter basis through both new talent acquisition and quarter time deposit disintermediation. Despite this expected remix of deposits, the granularity of our community banking franchise benefits our deposit portfolio. We operate through 49 banking locations across our Upstate New York footprint, which had average deposit balances per branch of approximately $79 million, excluding reciprocal and brokered deposits. Further, uninsured retail deposits make up approximately 14% of total deposits when considering the secured nature of our public and reciprocal portfolios, which typically have larger balances. Independent of the balance sheet, our available committed liquidity remained strong at approximately $1.2 billion. Organic loan growth was once again a highlight of our quarterly performance with a 4.8% increase in total loans from December 31, 2022, which was supported by a strong pipeline at year end 2022 and several large commitments that carried over to the first quarter of 2023. In our investor presentation published yesterday, you'll find more granularity on our commercial portfolio, and in particular, commercial real estate and office space exposure. Commercial growth has been achieved while maintaining our disciplined credit culture. Our experienced in-market lenders have excellent relationships with high quality sponsors within our footprint that have demonstrated consistency in execution and credit performance. Our CRE portfolio consists of assets with outstanding balances of $1.6 billion and committed credit exposure of $2.1 billion at March 31. There are more than 700 loan facilities associated with this portfolio among approximately 300 separate lending relationships, resulting in an average loan size of approximately $2.8 million. And considering the rollover risk of the portfolio, 15.5% of exposure is scheduled to mature within the next 12 months and another 14% will mature within 24 months. We have been careful to scale our underwritten loan amounts to the global financial profile and track record of sponsors. Our analysis indicates that proxy [ph] maturities are manageable. More than 90% of CRE loans have full or limited personal or corporate recourse, helping mitigate loan rollover risk and reinforcing the alignment of interest between borrowers and Five Star Bank. The average loan-to-value ratio of the portfolio is 55%. Realizing that at a national level, there is a heightened focus on office CRE. I would like to comment on the stability of our office book, which we believe is of high quality and differentiated from what lenders operate primarily in large urban markets might be experiencing. Office space represents 18% of our CRE exposure and less than 8% of total loan balances at March 31. About 3/4 of the portfolio is for Class B or medical space, which consists of medical properties located in close proximity to hospitals in densely populated areas. We have very limited exposure to central business districts with just 4 loans for properties representing total exposure of $27 million and we have strong confidence in the quality of the sponsors we're working with on these projects. In fact, 2 of these loans are with a publicly-traded developer who will be leasing the space to a publicly-traded tenant with an A+ credit rating for over 20 years, which is longer than the term of our loan. Consistent with our approach for all CRE lending, we have reasonable loan to leverage ratios for our office portfolio, including average loan-to-value at origination of 57%. In our annual stress testing of the portfolio, including increasing rates by 250 basis points above current rates and decreasing net operating income by 20%, we achieved debt service coverage ratios of 1:1. As supported by strong sponsors and personal recourse on loans, we remain comfortable with the overall quality and mix of the office book given geographic dispersion, strong credit metrics and exposure diversification outside of central business districts. Multifamily is our largest concentration, representing 39% of CRE exposures and 15% of loans. Within our multifamily portfolio, about 53% relates to stabilized properties and the remainder are in the construction phase. We are considered a premier construction lender in our market and have been providing construction funds for projects that have identified permanent mortgage take-out options by obtaining long-term non-recourse financing structures. Supporting the diversification of commercial loans is our expanded geographic footprint. Our Mid-Atlantic team, which joined us a little over a year ago, grew commercial loans outstanding by approximately $49 million in the first quarter of 2023 to $197 million at March 31. In the first quarter of this year, we also announced our expansion into the Syracuse, New York market with a new commercial loan production office. We have 3 C&I lenders based at this office and believe this expansion will support the growth of our commercial business portfolio, which was up 4.6% during the first quarter driven by line draws [ph]. The team has been doing an excellent job of engaging with prospective clients so far, and we look forward to their future attributions. Our residential loan portfolio was relatively flat with the end of the linked fourth quarter as expected. Among ongoing pressures of inflation, higher interest rates and tight housing inventory, the consumer indirect loan portfolio was $1 million at quarter end, also flat with the linked quarter. As we noted on our call in January, we are proactively moderating consumer and direct production through pricing and continue to remaining focused on credit quality and stringent underwriting standards, which has been and continues to be the foundation to this business activity. Ours is a prime lending operation with average portfolio FICO score of 714. In the first quarter, 60% of consumer indirect fundings were Tier 1, 700 and above; and another 22% were Tier 2, 670 and above. The weighted average coupon on new production was 8.45%. Net charge-offs were 73 basis points in the current quarter, in line with historical trends. Our disciplined approach to credit and risk management continues to support strong asset quality metrics. For the first quarter, we reported 21 basis points of both non-performing loans and annualized net charge-offs to average loans. While we did see a $17.7 million increase during the quarter in criticized and classified loans to $77.7 million, this increase related to 2 relationships that were downgraded to special mention. One in the C&I portfolio, which is expected to be temporary as well as one CRE relationship where we are a participant. Provision for credit losses on loans was $4.2 million in the quarter, supporting an allowance for credit losses to total loans ratio of 112 basis points and 540% of non-performing loans at March 31. Overall, credit remains benign and we continue to believe our loan portfolio performance will be consistent with historic outcomes. This concludes my introductory comments. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Jack for additional details on results and updates to our guidance for 2023.