Thanks, Kate. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. Throughout 2023 and the unprecedented pressures it brought to the banking industry, our company is proactive in defending deposits, growing relationships with new and existing customers, and strengthening liquidity and capital. The fourth quarter was no different, as we made strategic decisions in the best interest of the company that reflect our proactive effort to control expenses and put us in a stronger position going into 2024. In December, we announced changes to our leadership team and an associated realignment that strengthens our ability to execute our long-term strategy by enabling us to operate in a more nimble manner by reducing layers of management and realigning key areas of our organization to better leverage the experience within our executive and senior leadership team, drive greater operational efficiency and process improvements, particularly within our retail franchise, accelerate growth of our digital engagement, while ensuring our customer-facing teams remain in a strong position to provide value-added services, align marketing, brand strategy, and enterprise sales more closely with our long-term growth targets, and continue to carefully manage expenses, particularly within salaries and benefits and third-party vendor relationships. This realignment reflects a very thoughtful process that was certainly not easy, but the current operating environment required us to reflect on past investments to ensure they're still appropriate and adjust our approach to drive near-term success in support of our long-term objectives. The prolonged higher interest rate environment and inverted yield curve grow funding costs higher throughout 2023, which pressured revenue. As a result, our annual net income available to common shareholders of $48.8 million or $3.15 per diluted share and quarterly net income of $9.4 million or $0.61 per share were down from both the linked and prior year periods. These results were also impacted by a number of items that, again, reflect our proactive work to enhance our forward earnings potential. Including active balance sheet management through realignment of our company owned life insurance investments and the repositioning of a segment of our investment securities portfolio. Jack will walk through these actions in more detail in his remarks. Our 13% non-public deposit growth and 6% total deposit growth were highlights of 2023 results. While deposits were down from the end of the third quarter due primarily to the seasonality of public deposits, we remain very pleased with our ability to attract and retain deposits amid intense competition over the course of the year. Our success was driven in part by a money market account campaign that ran from late July through November. In total, we welcomed more than 1,000 new retail customers, who were primarily based in the metros of Buffalo and Rochester. These new customers brought in more than $100 million to Five Star Bank, in addition to deposits brought in by our long-standing customer base. BaaS deposits grew to $127 million during 2023. While this was short of our initial target of $150 million, year-end balances reflect a combination of our thoughtful governance process and deliberate pace of transitioning clients onto our best platform, as well as the natural fluctuation in partner balances. Maintaining our credit discipline lending, we grew loans to $4.5 billion, up 10% in 2023 and about 1% during the fourth quarter. On a linked quarter basis, growth in residential and commercial lending was partly offset by a decline in our consumer indirect as we continue to moderate production, while enhancing the profitability of this portfolio. We also made the decision to exit the Pennsylvania auto market effective January 1st in order to align our focus more fully around our core upstate New York market. Commercial real estate growth remained muted in the fourth quarter, as anticipated, due to a combination of softer demand amid a challenging economic environment, higher pricing hurdles, and our efforts to moderate production. Commercial and industrial lending was up more than 3% during the quarter. And as a reminder, our newest commercial LPO opened in January 2023 in Syracuse, New York and houses a team of experienced C&I lenders. Given the tech-driven economic development taking place in central New York, we are well positioned to capitalize on both C&I and CRE opportunities that we believe are on the horizon as this region becomes a hub of the microchip industry. Turning to asset quality, non-performing loans as a percentage of total loans were 60 basis points at year end, up from 21 basis points at September 30th, 2023. This increase was largely due to higher commercial nonperforming loans as we moved a single relationship totaling $13.6 million in exposure to nonaccrual. This CRE sponsor, who has a long and positive track record and strong portfolio of performing properties is working through what we believe are short-term cash flow issues related to newer properties that have not yet stabilized. We are actively managing this situation with our workout group, the borrower and the banks participating in this club deal to ensure a satisfactory resolution. Setting aside this borrower, the remaining $2.6 million of commercial nonperforming loans are primarily smaller relationships that are not concentrated in any specific industry. Annualized net charge-offs to average loans were 38 basis points for the fourth quarter and 20 basis points for the full year of 2023. During the fourth quarter, we did experience a commercial charge-off of approximately $1 million largely associated with one relationship. Given the $1 million recovery recorded in the third quarter, our full year 2023 commercial net charge-off ratio was 0 basis points while consumer indirect charge-offs are up compared to September 30 and year-end 2022, they are commensurate with the size of this portfolio and remain within our historical norms with annual net charge-offs to average loans of 76 basis points in 2023. This annual ratio has ranged between 45 to 87 basis points since 2008 apart from the exceptionally low 14 basis points we reported in 2021. What we've experienced since then is a return to normalcy, and we do expect delinquencies in this asset class to remain somewhat elevated through at least the first half of 2024, as the impacts of inflation, the exhaustion of stimulus payments by consumers, resumption of student loan payments and economic headwinds work their way through the portfolio. As we continue to reduce overall indirect balances, consistent net charge-off amounts over the next few quarters would be reflected as higher charge-off ratios. I would note that as the total loans have grown, our credit quality metrics have remained solid and generally stable, a reflection of our strong fundamental underwriting processes and experienced credit professionals working in separate credit delivery and relationship-based functions. Since December of 2008, our nonperforming loans have ranged from 17 basis points to 90 basis points of total loans every quarter. Considering that the media and publicly traded $5 billion to $10 billion asset bank in the U.S. today reported between 36 basis points and 278 basis points over the same time period, we consider this to be exceptional. In fact, our nonperforming loans ratio beat this peer group median more than 80 basis points on average in all but one of the more than 60 quarters since the start of 2008. Overall, we remain very confident in the health of our loan portfolio and associated asset quality metrics. This concludes my introductory comments. It's now my pleasure to turn the call over to Jack for additional details on results and details of our 2024 guidance.