Thank you, Michael, and thank you all for joining today's call. We have several key updates regarding our operations and the broader economic environment. First, I'd like to share our concern for all those impacted by the recent hurricanes that swept through communities in the Southeast. Our thoughts are with all those affected. As it relates to our portfolio, we fortunately sustained minimal impact. Our team has been proactive in reaching out, supporting tenants and responding promptly to any needs. Turning to the broader economic environment, the Fed in September implemented its first rate cut, marking a change in policy since rate hikes began in 2022. They lowered the benchmark federal funds rate by 50 basis points to a range of 4.75% to 5%, down from its prior range of 5.25% to 5.5%, which had been the highest level in 23 years. This marks a significant reversal after a prolonged period of high rates that negatively impacted capital markets. We expect additional cuts to follow, though the timing and magnitude of those cuts depends on economic indicators. September US job growth surged with employers adding 254,000 jobs significantly surpassing expectations, while unemployment rate also dipped to 4.1 from 4.2. While this is positive for the overall economy, the strength of the labor market and the higher-than-expected inflation in September may push out any further rate cuts. Continued momentum could create challenges in balancing inflation concerns with market expectations for lower interest rates. Today's election is likely to bring further volatility to the markets as fiscal and regulatory policies are debated. We believe our portfolio is well positioned regardless of which party is in office. Despite broader economic uncertainties, our portfolio continues to perform well with industrial real estate being a key growth driver. According to Colliers Industrial Market Statistics for the third quarter, net absorption in the United States totaled 39 million square feet, bringing the year-to-date total to 115 million square feet. This compares to 180 million square feet of absorption recorded during the same period of time last year. This reflects a 36% decline due primarily to a particularly slow first quarter. Of the 77 markets tracked by Colliers, 19 saw net absorption over 1 million square feet in Q3, while 26 markets turned negative. We expect leasing to pick up in the fourth quarter, driven by increased economic activity. On the supply side, new construction slowed to 76 million square feet in Q3, which was 54% lower than last year. This has tempered the rise in vacancy rates, which increased by only 19 bps, which points to a 6.6%. However, for longer rate environment has discouraged new starts from last year and led to declining new completions, so we expect vacancies to begin to decline in 2025. Although the broader economic outlook has its challenges, we have not observed any significant decline in tenant credit quality across our portfolio. In the longer term, industrial real estate, specifically manufacturing-related real estate is poised for continued growth driven by reshoring and nearshoring. We are well-positioned to capitalize on new opportunities, utilizing our expertise in underwriting middle-market credits to grow our portfolio of well-located mission-critical industrial assets. Now moving on to a few company portfolio specifics for the third quarter. During the quarter we increased our industrial concentration as a percentage of annualized straight-line rent from 62% to 63% and we decreased our office from 34% to 33%. We successfully leased or extended more than 242,000 square feet across five assets for a weighted average 7.2 years. These new leases and extensions resulted in a more than 100,000 straight-up rent plus up. Through the third quarter, our portfolio management team has re-leased or renewed more than 2.6 million square feet across 10 assets for an aggregate 3.7 million straight line rent plus up. We have no remaining expiring leases in 2024. We acquired industrial asset in Midland, Texas for $10 million with a weighted GAAP cap rate of 9.94% in a 15-year term. We successfully sold two medical office assets in Georgia resulting in more than $10.3 million in gain on sale. We've collected 100% of cash base rents and portfolio occupancy remains at 98.5%. Before turning the call over to Gary Gerson, our CFO, I will highlight our plans and goals for the next 12 months. We are proud of our progress since COVID, particularly, our shift toward a higher concentration of industrial assets. Since 2018, all but two acquisitions have been industrial with almost $565 million invested in this property type. As capital markets open up, we will continue growing our industrial concentration, aiming to exceed 70% of annualized straight line rent in the next 12 months. We are actively disposing of non-core office assets and currently have one new industrial opportunity under contract for $12.1 million set to close in the fourth quarter. We will continue disposing of non-core office assets. We will use office sale proceeds in our existing cash flow to redeploy into industrial assets. We will leverage our proprietary in-house credit underwriting expertise to capitalize on sale leaseback opportunities, a hallmark of our value proposition. Unlike many of our peers, we have the ability to closely monitor our tenants' financial health allowing us to proactively manage risk. Additionally, we will have the flexibility to structure our leases and covenants in ways that provide added protection, ensuring long-term stability for both us and our tenants. We will focus on keeping a healthy and flexible balance sheet. As of September 30, we had liquidity of $80.7 million including $70.2 million of availability under our credit facility and $10.5 million in cash. We remain below a 50% levered level as of September 30, 2025. Successfully completing these goals will better position us for our next stage of growth, including obtaining a credit rating and a private placement and expanding our industrial portfolio in new and existing markets. I will now turn the call over to Gary to review our financial results for the quarter and liquidity position.