Thank you, and good evening, and thanks for joining us today. I'm accompanied this evening by CFO and Head of Consumer Lending, Mark Ruggiero. On a core operating basis, results for the first quarter were reflective of solid pre-provision net revenue growth offset by higher credit costs. PPNR growth was driven by net interest margin improvement, solid fee revenue results and well controlled expenses. Operating leverage was positive on both a linked-quarter and year-over-year basis. Our PPNR ROAA was 1.52% on an operating basis, and our tangible book value improved 1.8% from the fourth quarter and 7.8% from the year ago quarter. Notwithstanding the operating results I just mentioned, credit costs for the first quarter were elevated as we continue to move through the resolution of several previously identified problem loans. We signaled last quarter that we expected our largest NPL to be resolved in the second quarter. It is still on track to do so. We had one other large NPL we thought would be resolved in the first quarter, which has slipped into the second quarter. Finally, as we signaled during our year-end earnings call, we have one large problem loan that moved to non-performing status in the first quarter. Mark will go into more detail during his comments, but we have not seen any material increase in our problem loans and feel that we have identified the significant stress loans and have a detailed action plan for each one of them. From a business perspective, clearly the combined impact of tariffs and other potential federal government actions has increased economic uncertainty. While it is too early to tell what the impact of the tariffs will be or what the tariffs are for that matter, most of the clients I've spoken to are taking a wait-and-see approach. The lack of certainty is causing them to pause any significant expansion or growth initiatives at the moment as they assess the economic landscape. Despite the noise, we made solid progress on several of our key strategic priorities in the first quarter. We continue to reduce our commercial real estate concentration. C&I and small business loans were up 2.1% and 2.6%, respectively in the first quarter. Conversely, CRE and construction loan balances were down 1.2% due to normal amortization, the intentional reduction of transactional CRE business, and charge-offs. As we have said in the past, we will continue to reduce transactional CRE business and free up capacity to support our legacy commercial real estate relationships. Mark will provide more detail later on about our successful $300 million sub-debt raise, but that's going to lead to an expected pro forma CRE concentration slightly north of 300%, inclusive of the impact of the Enterprise acquisition. Continuing the shift towards C&I, over the past year, we've added seven C&I bankers, increasing the total to 31, reflecting the desirability of our platform and the award winning culture of Rockland Trust. In addition, two recent hires include a highly respected and very experienced individual as our Regional Manager for middle market C&I and Specialty Banking and an experienced international banker to lead our efforts in FX and trade finance. We expect both to make an immediate contribution. We continue to prepare for the closing of our pending acquisition of Enterprise. We expect the transaction will close in the third quarter of the year. The more time we spend with the Enterprise team, the more convinced we become about the strategic and financial merits of the deal. Importantly, a vast majority of customer-facing Enterprise employees have accepted offers to remain with Rockland Trust post-close, including 32 of Enterprise Bank's 33 commercial bankers who will remain post-close. Preparation for our core FIS processing platform upgrade scheduled for May of '26 is ongoing. The move to a new platform within the FIS ecosystem will improve our technology infrastructure, enhance efficiency, and support the future growth of the bank. We prudently grew deposits in the first quarter, which has been a historical strength of ours. Non-time deposits were up 2.8% year-over-year and 3.2% from the fourth quarter. In the first quarter, the cost of deposits was 1.56%, highlighting the immense value of our deposit franchise. Mark will provide additional color on our deposits in a few minutes. Finally, our Wealth Management business continues to be a key value driver. We grew our AUA by nearly 1% in the first quarter to $7 billion. Organic growth or net positive flows totaled $41 million in the quarter. IMG had positive returns in the first quarter despite the fact that the S&P 500 was down over 4%. Total Investment Management revenues increased 4% from the fourth quarter and nearly 13% from the first quarter of '24. This business works seamlessly with our retail and commercial colleagues to deliver a holistic experience that resonates with our clients. The breadth of these services provides one-stop shopping for our clients that includes not only investment management, but financial planning, estate planning, tax prep, insurance and business advisory services. This full suite of products is a differentiating factor for our wealth business. Enterprise Bancorp will add approximately $1.5 billion in AUA to our platform and offer additional cross-sell opportunities with our broader product offerings. Underscoring every major -- every measure of success is a talented team of engaged, passionate, and highly talented colleagues focused on making a difference for the customers and communities we serve. That is why we are proud to be named a top place to work in Massachusetts by the Boston Globe for the 16th consecutive year. In addition, Rockland Trust was recently ranked number two in New England in the 2025 J.D. Power Retail Banking Satisfaction Study for the second straight year, underscoring our exceptional customer service. We were also named Best Bank in the Northeast by Greenwich for overall satisfaction and likelihood to recommend. We remain confident about our abilities to navigate a volatile interest rate and economic environment. In times of uncertainty, we are fortunate to have an envious deposit franchise, a strong liquidity position, and a robust capital base. We will continue to focus on those actions we have control over and look to capitalize on our historical strengths, which include a skilled and experienced management team, attractive markets, strong brand recognition, operating scale, a broad consumer, commercial and wealth customer base, and an energized and engaged workforce. In short, I believe we're well-positioned to realize the benefits of the Enterprise acquisition and continue to take market share in the Northeast. On that note, I'll turn it over to Mark.