Thanks, Curt, and good morning to all of you on the call. Unless I note otherwise, the quarterly comparisons I will discuss are with the first quarter of 2023, and the loan and deposit growth numbers I will be referencing are annualized percentages on a linked quarter basis. Starting on Slide 6. As Curt noted, operating earnings per diluted share this quarter were $0.47 on operating net income available to common shareholders of $77.8 million. This compares to $0.39 of operating EPS in the first quarter of 2023. Looking at the balance sheet. Loan growth slowed marginally in the second quarter to $374 million or 7% annualized. Commercial loans were $119 million of this increase or about one-third of our overall growth. Commercial real estate lending grew $100 million or 5% annualized, with most of this growth coming in owner-occupied commercial real estate. As noted earlier, our commercial real estate concentration remains low, approximately 180% of total capital. Consumer lending produced growth of $256 million or 15% during the quarter. Mortgage lending was the majority of our consumer loan growth as the second quarter is typically the peak of the home buying season. We continue to raise new loan rates across all products and remain focused on the risk-adjusted returns we are getting on new originations. As a result, we expect to see loan growth moderate both in residential mortgage and in the overall portfolio during the back half of 2023. Total deposits declined $110 million during the quarter. Interest-bearing deposits grew $428 million during the period or approximately 11%. This growth was offset by the pace of decline in our non-interest-bearing DDA accounts. Non-interest-bearing balances declined $538 million during the period, which is down from a $603 million decline in the first quarter. Our loan-to-deposit ratio ended the quarter at 99.2%, up from 97% at the end of the first quarter. As many investors are focused on where non-interest-bearing deposit levels will ultimately end up, we've included on Slide 7 a 30-plus year history of our non-interest-bearing deposit percentage. As our bank has grown and our C&I capabilities have expanded, this percentage has trended upward over time. Recently, rising rates have caused the deposit mix shift to occur and we believe we should end the year at around 23% non-interest-bearing deposits as a percentage of total deposits, down from 28% at June 30. This estimate assumes an additional deposit shift of approximately $800 million into interest-bearing deposits during the back half of 2023. This mix shift is reflected in the refreshed NII guidance I will provide at the end of my comments. Our investment portfolio declined modestly during the quarter, closing at $3.9 billion. During the first quarter, we chose to build cash reserves from the cash flows in our investment portfolio. Going forward, we expect to revert back to our longer-term cash targets with incremental cash flows used to reduce overnight borrowings. Putting together those balance sheet trends on Slide 8, our net interest income was $213 million for the quarter, a $3 million decrease from the first quarter. Our net interest margin for the second quarter and for the month of June were both 3.40% versus 3.53% in the first quarter. Loan yields expanded 31 basis points during the period, increasing to 5.52% versus 5.21% last quarter. Cycle-to-date, our loan beta has been 46%. Our total cost of deposits increased 50 basis points to 132 basis points during the quarter. Cycle-to-date, our total deposit beta is approximately 26%. Where are through-the-cycle deposit beta ultimately ends up will be very closely tied to where the non-interest-bearing percentage ends up landing. Based on our earlier estimate of around 23% by the end of the year, this will imply a deposit beta of approximately 40%. But we expect our loan beta to continue to drift up between now and the end of the year as well. So ultimately, we believe our ending loan beta will remain meaningfully higher than our ending deposit beta due to the asset-sensitive nature of our balance sheet. Turning to credit quality on Slide 9. Our non-performing loans declined $17 million during the quarter, which led to our NPL-to-loans ratio improving from 80 basis points at March 31 to 70 basis points at June 30. Overall loan delinquency improved to 105 basis points at June 30 versus 128 basis points last quarter. Despite these positive trends, our loan growth during the second quarter and modest changes to the economic outlook led to the increase in our allowance for credit losses. Our ACL as a percentage of loans increased slightly during the quarter from 1.35% of loans at March 31 to 1.37% at quarter end. Turning to non-interest income on Slide 10. Wealth Management revenues were $18.7 million, up from $18.1 million for the first quarter. We continue to invest in our wealth business, and it now represents almost one-third of our fee-based revenues. The market value of assets under management and administration increased $100 million to $14.3 billion at June 30. Commercial banking fees increased significantly to $23.1 million during the quarter. Capital markets revenue was very strong and merchant and card revenues bounced back from seasonal declines we typically see in the first quarter. SBA gains on sale were also strong during the quarter. Consumer banking fees were up modestly for the quarter, with seasonal pickups in debit and credit card revenues, offset by a continuing decline in overdraft fees. Mortgage banking revenues picked up from seasonal lows in the first quarter. However, application volumes are down 14% year-over-year, and rate increases are beginning to influence applications and overall volumes. Moving to Slide 11. Non-interest expenses were $168 million in the second quarter, an $8 million increase from the first quarter. The increase in day count accounted for about one quarter of this increase. In addition, the following material items are noted. Higher salaries and benefits costs are due to the April 1 merit increases as well as higher healthcare claims as we are largely self-insured and also higher data processing costs of $700,000 due to the timing of certain IT initiatives. On Slides 12 and 13, we are continuing to provide you with expanded metrics on capital and liquidity. First, on Slide 12, as of June 30, we maintained solid cushions over the regulatory minimums for all of our regulatory capital ratio. We have also provided you with an alternative view of our regulatory ratios, including the impact of AOCI. While we do not expect banks of our size to be required to calculate our ratios this way, we believe this information maybe useful to you. Our tangible common equity ratio was 7% at quarter end, in line with last quarter. Included in tangible common equity is accumulated other comprehensive loss on the available-for-sale portion of our investment portfolio and derivatives. This number totaled $312 million after tax on a total AFS portfolio of $2.6 billion. On Slide 13, if we include the loss on our held-to-maturity investments, which is $115 million after tax on an HTM portfolio of $1.3 billion, our tangible common equity ratio would still be 6.6% at June 30, representing over $1.7 billion intangible capital. On Slide 14, we provided you with a comprehensive look at our liquidity profile. When combining cash, committed and available FHLB capacity, the Fed discount window and unencumbered securities available to pledge under the Fed's bank term funding program, our committed liquidity is $8.2 billion at June 30. In addition, we maintained over $2.5 billion in Fed funds lines with other institutions. On Slide 15, we are providing you our updated guidance for 2023. Our guidance now assumes a 25 basis point Fed funds increase at the July meeting, followed by constant rates for the balance of the year. Based on this rate outlook, our 2023 guidance is as follows. We expect our net interest income on a non-FTE basis to be in the range of $830 million to $840 million. We expect our provision for credit losses to be in the range of $55 million to $65 million. We expect our non-interest income, excluding securities gains to be in the range of $220 million to $230 million. We expect core non-interest expenses to be in the range of $645 million to $660 million for the year. This core amount excludes any special FDIC assessment, which may need to be recorded in the second half of the year if finalized during that period. And lastly, we expect our effective tax rate to be in the range of 17.5%, plus or minus for the year. And with that, I'll now turn the call over to the operator for your questions.