Thank you, Jeff. I will be reviewing some of the main drivers of our performance for Q2 as I walk through our financial results. Unless otherwise noted, all of the prior period comparisons will be with the first quarter of 2023. Starting with net interest income, we experienced a decrease of $4 million or 6.7% in Q2 due mostly to an increase of $7.4 million in interest expense. This increase in interest expense resulted from a combination of an increase in our cost of interest-bearing deposits and an increased use of borrowings during the quarter. This was the main driver for the 35 basis point decrease in our net interest margin in Q2. As mentioned earlier, we had a solid loan growth of $124 million or 3% in Q2. In addition, yields on the loan portfolio were 5.19% for the quarter, which was 12 basis points higher than Q1 and contributed to an 11 basis point increase in yield on earning assets. Bryan McDonald will have an update on loan production and yields in a few minutes. Our cost of interest-bearing deposits increased 43 basis points to 0.92% for Q2. We continue to experience market pressure related to deposit rates. We are strategically increasing our deposit rates by product and working individually with our customers to maintain relationships. As a result of the current rate environment, we expect to continue to experience an increase in the cost of our core deposits, although at a slower pace than in Q2. The continued but slowing increase in this cost is illustrated by the cost of interest-bearing deposits being 1% for the month of June with a spot rate of 1.04% as of June 30. Overall, we experienced a decline in deposit balances of 3.3% for the quarter. The decline occurred primarily in April, which is a month that typically experiences decreases in deposit balances due to tax payments Deposit balances were relatively flat during the last two months of the quarter. Bryan will discuss our deposit pipeline later in the presentation. Our insured deposits were at 67% of total deposits at June 30 compared to 65% at March 31. Also for customers seeking additional FDIC insurance, we offer deposit products, which have full FDIC insurance. On balance sheet, deposit totals for these accounts were $219 million at the end of Q2. In order to supplement our funding, we borrowed $450 million from the Federal Reserve's Bank Term Funding Program or BTFP, and paid off existing FHLB advances. We utilized the BTFP due to the lower cost and fixed rate nature of the notes as well as the option to prepay borrowings at any time. The blended rate on the BTFP advances was 4.72% in Q2 compared to an average cost of 5.15% for the FHLB advances for the quarter. You can refer to Pages 38 and 39 of the investor presentation for more specifics on our borrowings and liquidity position. As I previously mentioned, we experienced a sizable decrease in NIM to 3.56% for Q2 from 3.91% in the prior quarter. We expect NIM to decrease further in Q3, although not as significantly. This can be illustrated by a NIM of 3.54% for the month of June, which is only 2 basis points lower than for the entire second quarter. The pace and duration of our decrease in margin will be highly dependent on continued increases in our cost of interest-bearing deposits as well as maintaining deposit balances. As our cost of deposits as well as deposit balances level off, we expect to experience margin stabilization due to the repricing of adjustable rate loans in addition to higher origination rates on new loans. Moving on to capital. All of our regulatory capital ratios remain comfortably above well-capitalized thresholds and our TCE ratio was at 8.3%, unchanged from the prior quarter. In addition, with a loan deposit ratio of 76%, we have plenty of liquidity to continue to grow our loan portfolio. Noninterest income decreased from the prior quarter, primarily due to a $1.6 million onetime gain on the sale of Class B Visa stock, which occurred in Q1. Noninterest expense decreased $280,000 to $41.3 million in Q2. This was due mostly to a decrease in the accrual for incentive-based compensation resulting from lower expected earnings this year. Looking ahead, we expect noninterest expense to be in the low $42 million range for Q3. The effective tax rate decreased to 15.2% in Q2 from 17.1% in Q1 in order to adjust the year-to-date effective tax rate to the current estimated rate for 2023, which is now at 16.3%. And finally, moving on to the allowance, even though we continue to show strong credit quality metrics, we recognized a provision for credit losses of $1.9 million during the quarter due mostly to increases in loan balances. I will now pass the call to Tony, who will have an update on these credit quality metrics.