Thank you, Curt, and good morning. Unless I note otherwise, the quarterly comparisons I mentioned are with the fourth quarter of 2024, and loan and deposit numbers, I'll be referencing are annualized percentage growth on a linked quarter basis. So starting on Slide 8, operating earnings per diluted share this quarter were $0.40 on operating net income available to common shareholders of $65.4 million. This compares to $0.42 of operating EPS in the fourth quarter of 2023. As Curt noted, loan growth was modest during the quarter, increasing $93 million, or 2%. Commercial lending contributed $73 million of this growth, or 2%. The primary contributors included commercial real estate of $124 million or 6% and construction loan growth of $24 million, or 9%, offset by a decline in C&I loans of $78 million, primarily due to slightly lower line utilization. Our CRE growth was not concentrated in any one category or geography and as shown in our earnings deck, remains well diversified. Consumer lending produced growth of $20 million, or 1% during the quarter, an increase of $70 million in residential mortgages, primarily adjustable rate was offset by decreases in other categories including consumer, direct and indirect loans, residential construction, and home equity. Total deposits increased $204 million during the quarter. Growth in time deposits, primarily with maturities less than one year more than offset the seasonal outflows in our municipal deposits of $137 million. Non-interest-bearing DDA balances ended the quarter at $5.1 billion, or 23.4% of total deposits in line with our expectations. Our net interest income guidance for 2024 assumes we will continue to see migration from non-interest bearing to interest-bearing products throughout this year, but at a slower pace than we saw last year. Our investment portfolio was up modestly for the quarter closing at $3.8 billion, or 13.7% of assets. During the quarter, we purchased $210 million of MBS and CMO securities. These balance sheet trends are summarized in Slide 10. You can see net interest income was $207 million, a $5 million decline linked quarter, primarily driven by the modest change in the mix of our deposit portfolio. And as a result, net interest margin declined 4 basis points to 3.32% versus 3.36% last quarter. Loan yields increased 7 basis points during the period, increasing to 5.9% versus 5.83% last quarter, and cycle to date, our loan beta has been 50%. Our cost of total deposits increased 16 basis points to 195 basis points during the quarter and cycle to date, our total deposit beta has been 36%. Turning to asset quality in Slide 11. NPLs increased $2.8 million during the quarter, resulting in a slight increase in the NPL to loans ratio from 72 basis points at 12/31 to 73 basis points at quarter end. Net charge-offs were $8.6 million, or 16 basis points. Gross charge-offs of $11 million were fairly granular, with the largest being $2.5 million on a C&I loan. Our allowance for credit losses as a percentage of loans increased slightly to 1.39% at quarter end. Turning to non-interest income on Slide 12. Wealth management revenues were $20.2 million, up $766,000 compared to the fourth quarter, passing the $20 million mark for the first-time in company history. Wealth management represents about a third of our fee-based revenues, with over 80% of those revenues recurring. Also, the market value of assets under management and administration increased over $700 million to $15.5 billion at March 31, also a new record for our company. Commercial banking fees declined $2 million to $18.8 million as customer swap revenue, heavily reliant on new originations declined compared to a strong fourth quarter. Consumer banking fees declined approximately $400,000 to $11.7 million. First quarter seasonality played a part in that linked quarter decline. Our consumer banking business continues to deliver a very consistent income stream. Mortgage banking revenues increased $802,000 to $3.1 million and were driven by a seasonal increase in mortgage originations, as well as gain on sales spreads that rebounded from a low last quarter. We have a number of investments that are accounted for under the equity method on which we recorded a loss of $1.6 million reflected in the other income line. Moving to Slide 13. Non-interest expenses on an operating basis were $170 million in line with the prior quarter and in line with our guidance. The material items we exclude from operating expenses include charges -- the following charges, $1 million for special FDIC assessment, $3.6 million related to the closure of some financial centers, $2.5 million of consulting expense, and $200,000 of severance expense. Slide 14 shows a snapshot of our capital base and you can see as of March 31, we maintained solid cushions over the regulatory minimums. Also, both bank and parent company liquidity improved during this quarter. On Slide 16, we are reiterating our guidance for 2024. Our guidance assumes that a total of 75 basis points of Fed funds decreases will occur in the second half of 2024. So our guidance is as follows. We expect net interest income on a non-FTE basis to be in the range of $790 million to $820 million. We expect the provision for credit losses to be in the range of $45 million to $65 million. We expect non-interest income, excluding security gains to be in the range of $235 million to $250 million. We expect non-interest expenses on an operating basis to be in the range of $670 million to $690 million for the year and to reinforce that estimate excludes potential non-operating charges we may incur as we move through the year. And lastly, we expect our effective tax rate to be in the range of 17% to 18% for the year. With that, we'll now turn the call over to Abigail for questions.