Thank you, Cindi. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to our second quarter results conference call. I'm happy to be here with you this afternoon and hope that each of you and your families are continuing to stay healthy and safe. During today's call, I'll provide key takeaways from the quarter, a review of segment performance and then market trends and an update on the progress we have made on our strategic initiatives. Wes will then discuss our second quarter results in greater detail and provide some commentary on our outlook for 2024. We'll then open up the call for questions and end with closing remarks. We delivered another period of stable, profitable operating results during the second quarter and we continue to make important progress on our strategic objectives. While our second quarter results were negatively impacted by some short-term project delays in our Services division, consolidated revenue still increased nearly 5% compared to last year, driven by strong growth in our fabrication division. Project pushouts in our Services segment and incremental investments in the support of our growth objectives negatively impacted our second quarter results and are likely to cause us to fall short of our initial four-year Services EBITDA target. While we are disappointed to fall short of our guidance, we remain optimistic by the outlook for the Services business in Gulf Island overall. We are executing at a high level while investing in some exciting new growth businesses as our end markets remain strong. These tailwinds, along with our strong financial position, give us significant flexibility to continue to pursue our growth objectives. Now turning to our segment results. First, looking at our Services division, the overall spending environment in our key offshore services market remains strong. Our customers are healthy and their operations in the Gulf of Mexico remain extremely profitable. This is driving strong maintenance and capital spending, and we expect this to continue into 2025 based on commentary from key customers. However, the second quarter Services results were impacted by project delays and investment spending. The project delays were primarily related to Spark Safety project opportunities. These projects were not lost, but the project start dates were delayed due to some customer-specific issues. While we're working hard to make up for the impact of these pushouts, it is difficult to quickly recover from project slippage given the nature of our Services business, including our ability to ramp up craft headcount. We also made the decision to make incremental investment spending in support of exciting new growth initiatives and services. During the second quarter, we launched our Cleaning and Environmental Services business line, or CES, which expands our services offering to better support decommissioning activity in the Gulf of Mexico. We believe the decommissioning of oil and gas assets in the Gulf of Mexico represents a meaningful potential opportunity for Gulf Island in the coming years. The Government Accountability Office recently disclosed that 2,700 wells and 500 platforms are past due for dismantling and decommissioning in the Gulf of Mexico. In addition, a recent study by Nature Energy estimated there are roughly 14,000 nonproducing wells that will also need to be dismantled and decommissioned in the future. By law, oil and gas companies must decommission these wells. And the same study estimated a total cost of roughly $30 billion for the well decommissioning. While we have already participated in past decommissioning activities, we are seeing activity in the Gulf of Mexico pick up. And as a result, CES will add value to our overall decommissioning services as customers are inevitably looking for a single point of accountability. Accordingly, we made the strategic decision to ramp up our spending plans in order to launch our CES business. We have already witnessed keen interest from our clients and should see project activity in the second half of the year with a more significant ramp-up during 2025. The previously mentioned project delays combined with the incremental investment spending, both of which will continue into the second half of the year, are expected to cause us to fall short of our prior full year Services division EBITDA guidance. As a result, we are lowering our initial 14 million full year Services division EBITDA guidance to a range of 11 million to 13 million. Despite revising our Services division guidance, we remain optimistic for our Services division, especially as we continue to invest in new growth businesses. Now moving on to Fabrication, our revenue increased 27% from last year, driven by the strong momentum in our small fabrication business. The demand trends in the small-scale fabrication markets remain active, including opportunities in the subsea market and pull-through fabrication from our services customers. Our contract for the fabrication of structural components for NASA was once again a key contributor to our strong performance. This contract highlights the opportunity to expand our end market focus outside our traditional oil and gas markets. We are seeing that these end markets place a premium on quality and schedule certainty, areas where Gulf Island is more than capable of delivering. As a result of our performance, we have been given additional scopes of work that will extend our NASA contract through 2024. We have caught the attention of NASA and their contractors and believe we are in an attractive position to pursue new end markets and realize additional opportunities. On the large fabrication market, unfortunately, there has not been much of a change. Earlier this year, the Biden administration paused approvals for pending and future LNG projects. However, we did get some positive news recently as earlier this month a federal judge in Louisiana put the energy department's pause on natural gas export permits on hold. While we continue to pursue several attractive large fabrication projects associated with LNG, the regulatory uncertainty, uneven interest rate outlook and upcoming elections continue to extend the decision cycles and time lines for many of the large projects we are pursuing. We're also actively chasing large petrochemical opportunities, but these projects are facing budgetary challenges with current inflationary conditions and they are continuing to push to the right as well. However, we remain bullish on the potential for large fabrication awards, but the ability to predict timing remains challenging. We have grown our small-scale fabrication business and we are now much less dependent on large awards. Based on the strong market trend in our small fab markets as well as our opportunities in new adjacent end markets, we remain well positioned for growth in small fabrication while we wait for the right large project opportunities. As it relates to our Shipyard division, we have discussed that we substantially completed our remaining operational shipyard obligations during the fourth quarter of last year and the warranty periods for our ferry projects are the final remaining items associated with the wind down of the business. The warranty period for our 70 vehicle ferry project ends during the third quarter of 2024. In regards to the 40 vehicle ferries, the warranty for one of the ferries ended the past quarter. And the other vessels warranty period ends in the first quarter of 2025. In the second quarter, we also submitted our final plan to the North Carolina Department of Transportation and will pursue all legal avenues to recover previously incurred costs associated with the 40 vehicle ferry projects resulting from the customers' design deficiency on the vessel. In closing, while we have significantly improved the predictability and stability of our financial results in recent years in our business, project timing and mix will always be a factor in our quarterly operating performance. So while short-term factors negatively impacted our second quarter results and full year outlook, we remain confident in the long-term opportunities for Gulf Island. The bidding environment for large fabrication projects remains active, our base of Services customers are projecting increased capital spending in 2025, and we're in a favorable position to pursue our growth initiatives based on our strong financial position. This provides us with several avenues for potential value creation. And as we continue to execute on our strategic plan, we are confident in our ability to deliver shareholder value in the coming years. I will now turn the call over to Wes to discuss our quarterly results in greater detail.