Thank you, Lynn, and thank you all for joining us to review our Q2 results, the transactions we announced this afternoon and our business outlook. As there's a lot to discuss today, I will focus on the highlights of the second quarter and then quickly move on to recent developments and comment on the growth initiatives underway at ICF. There are several key takeaways from our second quarter performance. First, this was an excellent quarter for ICF. Revenues increased 18%, indicative of how well aligned our services and capabilities are with market demand. Second quarter revenue growth was led by strong year-on-year comparisons in our key growth markets and represented 10% organic growth, together with the SemanticBits' acquisition we completed in mid-2022. Second, contract awards were up 28% year-on-year, and we expect second half contract wins to be quite strong. Over 80% of our second quarter wins represented new business in [inaudible], another indication of ICF's competitive positioning in areas of priority spending. Our trailing 12-month book-to-bill ratio of 1.3 is among the highest in the industry and supports our expectations for significant revenue growth this year and into 2024. Third, we ended the quarter with a record business development pipeline of $10.3 billion, which represents almost 20% growth compared to year ago levels. This growth is attributable to our expanded capabilities, our ability to bid on larger contracts, thanks to our increased scale and the opportunities that are emerging from the IIJA and our IRA legislation. Lastly, we executed transactions that strengthened ICF's position in key growth areas and support our long-term growth strategy. Our energy environment, infrastructure and disaster recovery market, which spans our government and commercial client set, continue to be a standout performer in the second quarter. Revenues increased nearly 18%, primarily representing organic growth, and this market accounted for slightly over 40% of second quarter revenues. Commercial Energy represents a large part of that market and includes advisory work for utilities, the global energy developers and investors, implementation of energy efficiency and distributed energy programs for utilities and environmental services for utilities and other energy providers. Commercial energy revenues increased 22% in the second quarter and are up 20% year-to-date. We expanded our energy efficiency programs for several large utility clients and saw greater demand for advisory expertise and our environmental and planning services as clients plan their renewable projects in light of funds and tax credits made available through the IIJA and IRA. This is also a strong quarter of new contract awards in the commercial energy arena. There was particular strength in multiple innovative pilot programs, focusing on electrification, financing and energy equity. A material portion of the new work that we won is to provide services necessary to analyze, finance, permit, construct, connect, monitor and operate renewable projects across the country and offshore. The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission issued an order last week that should expedite interconnection of new wind, solar and storage resources to the grid, which should drive additional demand for our advisory work. In today's release, we announced the acquisition of CMY Solutions, which will expand our addressable market within the electrical sector. CMY Solutions is a power and engineering firm that provides next-generation technology solutions and data analytics that drive more informed decision-making on grid modernization and investments. CMY has a team of about 50 electrical engineers who work with utilities and developers across the U.S., Europe and Asia, including investor-owned utilities, electric municipalities and electric cooperatives. We have successfully partnered with CMY in several projects and together have an excellent track record of delivering positive results for our clients, which made this a compelling transaction for us. CMY expands our addressable market by giving us the ability to support client needs for renewables interconnection, substation and distribution upgrades and grid resilience and providing us new technology and data management capabilities that we can offer our commercial energy clients as well as our government clients. In addition to commercial energy, we also experienced strong demand in the second quarter for our Climate and Environmental Services, which, as you know, cut across all of our client categories. Second quarter growth in our Climate business was driven by newer expanding projects at NASA, EPA, DOE, USAID and 3 large East Coast utilities. ICF has one of the leading, if not the leading climate practice in the country, and we are seeing strong demand resulting for funding for decarbonization programs, including assessment, disclosure and management of risk in the private sector and large-scale programmatic funding by government, including the IIJA and IRA. Our environmental planning and monitoring services and disaster management account for over 80% of our state and local revenues, which in total increased over 27% in the second quarter. Pent-up demand post COVID and the IIJA and IRA are driving significant new infrastructure planning and investment and environmental scopes of work that are required at the front end of such projects are increasingly considering climate risk, energy equity, resilience, fire, flood and sea level rise, which is another example of the growing interconnections that play to ICF's competitive advantages. Revenues from our disaster recovery market continued to grow at a double-digit rate in the second quarter. We continued our recovery work in Puerto Rico and just announced a new $32.1 million contract with the U.S. territory to provide disaster management consulting services to accelerate federally funded recovery efforts across the territory. Our otherwise market is health and social programs, which is where our public health and the majority of our IT modernization services reside. This market is primarily comprised of work for the federal government, the small part representing services to state and local and international government clients and a minor contribution from commercial clients. In the second quarter, its revenues were up 30%, reflecting both organic growth and the acquisition of SemanticBits in this market accounted for 41% of total second quarter revenues. We continue to see strong year-on-year growth in public health and IT modernization in the second quarter. Public health and IT modernization are 2 areas that historically have garnered bipartisan support and have been well funded. We see significant runway to increase our market share of the Department of Health and Human Services, resulting from specific opportunities for revenue synergies tied to the SemanticBits acquisition, which we expect to bid over the next 6 to 9 months. Also, our greater scale is opening more and larger opportunity for us at HHS and across our federal government client set. Similarly, our social programs pipeline is very strong, and we have seen material growth in this area in the past and expect to see more in the future. Our pipeline and federal government opportunities increased 21% from the similar period last year and 6% sequentially, supporting our outlook for continued growth in the federal arena. Further, with regard to federal government opportunities, we are seeing increased interest in the use of AI amongst our federal government clients, and ICF is well positioned to benefit from this trend. In fact, we have been deploying AI and machine learning for years with our federal clients. As a leader in the shift to local and no-go platforms into open source solutions, our 1,800 technologists have been and will continue to take advantage of the AI capabilities embedded in these platforms, including developing novel generative AI approaches to automate cogeneration and enhanced developer productivity and leveraging AI to enable more efficient migration of technology to modern platforms. At the same time, we see generative AI as a way to improve the productivity and experience of our own employees and streamline various corporate functions at ICF. In fact, at the beginning of this year, we established a generative AI enablement team to identify and develop use cases for up Gen AI and be utilized to increase productivity for both client-related work and efforts internally within ICF. Lastly, in today's earnings release, we announced that ICF recently signed a definitive set of agreements to sell our commercial marketing group. Included in the sale were our commercial loyalty programs and integrated communication services for consumer and financial clients. This group has brought ICF's important capabilities that have provided and contributed to the growth of the engagement and communication services we provide to our government and utility clients. As we have increased our focus on key growth markets and mission-related areas within our government and commercial energy client sets, however, this group has become less core to what we do and thus the decision was made to divest the business. We are especially pleased that the group's senior leadership and staff have been offered positions by the acquirer, the transaction is expected to close in the third quarter, and Barry will provide additional details on the net effect of this divestiture and the CMY acquisition in his remarks. With that, I'll turn the call over to our CFO, Barry Broadus for a financial review. Barry?