Thank you, Jeff. I will now take us through the earnings presentation deck that was included in our 8-K filing and is available on our website in today's Investor portal. As Jeff hit upon many of the themes noted on Slide 2, I will move to Slide 3 of the deck which summarizes our second quarter results and key drivers. 2023 second quarter GAAP net income grew to $62.6 million and diluted EPS of $1.42, which reflected modestly higher loan balances, stable deposit levels, competitively higher funding costs and higher fee income along with the full quarter benefit of our first quarter buyback activity. These results produced a 1.29% return on assets and 8.78% return on average common equity and a 13.54% return on tangible common equity. And despite additional other comprehensive losses, tangible book value grew $0.57 or 1.4% in the second quarter. I'll now discuss the primary drivers behind the second quarter results as highlighted on this slide. As we move to Slide 4, we will focus first on deposit activity which remains top of mind. Total deposits declined minimally by $24.1 million or 0.2% to $15.25 billion when compared to last quarter. While the cost of deposits increased from 59 basis points in Q1 to 85 basis points in Q2, driven primarily by a continued shift to a more normal overall funding profile. The modest balance change for the quarter reflects a meaningful stabilization of our overall deposit balances. Our long-standing focus on core relationship accounts drove a healthy 1.1% increase or 4.4% annualized in total households for the quarter, as we are really starting to see our award-winning customer service and market reputation really resonate with both existing and new customers amidst the market disruption in our footprint. Continuing to focus on the strength of our deposit base, Slide 5 provides updated information regarding uninsured deposit balances, also reflecting stable levels when compared to the prior quarter. Turning now to Slide 6, we provide additional information regarding the company's overall liquidity position, including details around the measuring and monitoring of both on and off balance sheet metrics. The Q2 activity reflected in our interest-earning cash position includes a couple of items worth highlighting. First, in response to the stabilizing deposit environment, we just talked about. We reduced the amount of proactive borrowings from $300 million to $100 million during the quarter. In addition, you can see the rest of the quarterly cash activity is primarily a function of our core operating business and balance sheet changes for the quarter. Regarding our off-balance sheet borrowing capacity, we pledged additional securities during the second quarter to increase our overall borrowing capacity at the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston and we continue to track and monitor deposit activity to ensure appropriate risk mitigation as evidenced by our strong uninsured coverage metrics noted on this slide. Another important element of both our interest rate and capital risk management, Slide 7 summarizes key information related to our securities portfolio, which totaled $3 billion at quarter-end with an unrealized loss position on the AFS portfolio of $160 million or 10.4% of the portfolio. Not included in the reported balances is another $180 million of unrealized losses on the held to maturity portfolio are 11.1% of those balances. The average life of the entire portfolio was approximately 4.5 years with details of expected principal repayments over the next three years included on this slide. In terms of the portfolio impact on capital, we highlight that the tangible capital ratio remains very strong at 9.4% even when factoring in the held to maturity portfolio unrealized losses, net of tax. Moving to Slide 8. Total loans increased 1.4% or 5.5% annualized to $14.1 billion for the quarter, driven primarily by disciplined growth in our residential real estate and overall commercial portfolios, which are also benefiting from lower attrition levels. While we remain cautious in our approach to new loan opportunities, we are optimistic over second half deal flow. Our approved commercial pipeline at quarter end sits at a healthy $239 million and is anchored in our core relationship-based lending that has served us well over many years. And on the consumer portfolios, we are prioritizing salable or variable rate portfolio products on the residential lending side in addition to a stable home equity pipeline. And while Slide 9 provides an overall snapshot of the makeup of the various loan portfolios, we will dive a bit deeper into overall asset quality and non-owner occupied commercial real estate exposure. Regarding the latter, we move to Slide 10, which provides a number of details over that portfolio. As indicated, while we disclose owner-occupied and mixed-use balances in the top chart, our enhanced disclosure and credit risk monitoring is primarily focused on the approximately $1.07 billion of non-owner occupied office portfolio. Big picture, the current quarter migration of $14.2 million loan into nonperforming is driving the majority of the additional reserve allocation provided for in the quarter. While we continue to closely monitor the remaining exposure for any further degradation. As we work through that enhanced monitoring, we remain cautious yet comfort in the current status, noting that within our top 20 largest office balances, there is zero nonperforming and zero delinquent loans within that group. And noted on Slide 11, the story embedded in the graphs presented here a fairly straightforward. As I mentioned during the second quarter, we fully charged off the $23 million C&I loan that had already been fully reserved for as of last quarter, accounting for the vast majority of charge-offs in the quarter. Regarding that loan, we are still working through remediation efforts and any possible loss recovery is unknown at this point. As I noted on the previous slide, the provision for loan loss in the quarter was driven primarily by one office CRE loan that moved to nonperforming status and all other asset quality metrics remained stable. Turning to Slide 12 and the net interest margin, the full quarter have increased wholesale borrowings and higher deposit costs resulted in a 25 basis point reduction in the reported net interest margin to 3.54% for the quarter. When excluding non-core items, the core net interest margin decreased 26 basis points for the quarter. And as noted in the charts below, we now pegged the cumulative beta impact on both the loan and deposit portfolios at 28% and 16%, respectively. Though deposit rate pressures will persist, on a positive note, the relative stability of the deposit balances experienced in the second quarter along with asset repricing and hedge maturities benefit should provide a path to future margin stability in the second half of the year. Noted on Slide 13, fee income increased nicely in the quarter, fueled by increased wealth management fees, loan level derivative swap income and other miscellaneous items and other solid quarter of new money inflows in our wealth business along with market appreciation drove an overall increase in assets under administration to a record $6.3 billion at June 30, a $159 million or 2.6% increase over the prior quarter. As evidenced, excuse me, is further evidence of our focus on operating leverage. Total expenses noted on Slide 14 decreased by $3.1 million or 3.1% when compared to the prior quarter as we continue to ensure there is an appropriate balance of near-term expense discipline while not sacrificing investments in the company's future value initiatives. Lastly, as summarized on Slide 15, we provide an updated set of guidance focused primarily on general trends over near term expectations. As noted, we now expect relatively flat loan balances for the second half of the year. Though deposit balances stabilizing, we further expect remixing of noninterest-bearing deposits into term deposits, which will continue to pressure the net interest margin in the near future. Using the forward curve, assumptions we expect the margin to stabilize in the $335 million to $340 million range during the second half of the year, likely in the fourth quarter. Similar to the first half of the year, we expect changes in our borrowings levels will primarily be a direct reflection of loan and deposit changes. With the level of uncertainty still impacting all loan portfolios, we anticipate provision for loan loss will be driven primarily by the near term performance of our investment commercial real estate portfolio, and the office exposure, in particular. Regarding fee income, we anticipate flat to low single digit percentage increases when compared to Q2 results. And for non-interest expense, we also expect relatively flat to slightly increase levels as compared to Q2. That concludes my comments, and I'll now turn it back to Jeff. I'm sorry, we're actually going to take questions.