Thanks, Jen. And thanks for joining us this morning. First, let me again thank the board for giving me the opportunity to lead Kingstone as its CEO. I think it's important that we share more information with our investors and become more transparent to give you greater visibility as to the future. Our business is complicated, and I thought it could be explained better. So we've made further changes to our press release and 10-Q this quarter. Your positive feedback on the changes so far is much appreciated. As you know, Kingstone is in the midst of a transformation. Our strategy for the near term is to return to our roots as the premier writer of coastal property insurance in downstate New York, our core business, and we have been working hard to reduce our footprint outside of New York, our non-core business. As such, we've broken down our results between core and non-core, so that you can better understand the results of each segment. Please take your time going through the details contained in the press release and the 10-Q as you will see that the underlying core business is profitable, with a combined ratio of 96.4% for the quarter. Core premiums are growing, up just under 10% year-to-date. Core margins are expanding as average premiums are increasing and cost savings and efficiencies are taking hold. Non-core is shrinking, and by this time next year, the drag on our financials will be immaterial, if not gone. Kingstone is poised for a profitable 2024. For four years, I have talked about Kingstone 2.0, Kingstone 3.0, our employees have worked tirelessly to implement these strategies. They are now in place and at work. While I'll never say we are done, we have accomplished an incredible amount. I believe deeply in our strategy, the team that we've built and our progress so far. I am so proud of the company that we've become. We are smaller, highly efficient, nimble and focus on expanding the benefits that Kingstone 2.0 and Kingstone 3.0 have enabled. These benefits are now flowing through our income statement at an accelerating rate. And as the non-core business declines further, will become even more apparent in our overall results. That makes me confident that 2024 will be a great year for the company and its shareholders. Late last year, we also laid out a plan to return the company to profitability, and I'm going to highlight our progress on those key initiatives. In Q3, we were successful in reducing our non-core policies in force by 17% from the prior quarter and non-core policies in force are now down 35% from year-end 2022. Our estimate is that the non-core book will decline by close to 50% by the end of this year and by more than 80% by the end of next year. Combine that with the additional rate we've been able to take, and I hope to be able to report this time next year that the standalone non-core business is running at or near breakeven. The non-core business added 6.4 points to our combined ratio for the quarter and 7.9 points on a year-to-date basis. So you can see how important it is that we're accelerating this decline. Our pricing team has done a fantastic job with rate filing to manage our overall rate level in the face of loss trends that we and the industry have been seeing. As mentioned previously, we are addressing loss trends, including inflation in two ways. The most significant for this year has been our effort to update replacement cost on every policy. This effort commenced in September of last year, so all policies have now been through this process once. We will continue to update replacement costs annually, so that our customers are always insured to value. Don't forget that this update to replacement costs brings with it higher premium. And those are in addition to those that come from our rate filing. Let me point out that, for the trailing 12 months, we've realized a 25.5% increase in average premiums for our legacy homeowner product in New York as a result of the combination of rate and replacement cost updates. Let me also remind you that most of the added premiums have not yet been earned and will be reflected in future quarters. It takes about 18 months for rate increases to be fully reflected in earned premium and it will be reflected on ever accelerating basis over time. This increase in earned premium will by definition drive down the loss ratio and lead to further declines in our expense ratio. We did an excellent job managing our catastrophe reinsurance renewal, which resulted in a much lower increase than anticipated. We were fortunate that Jen joined us earlier in the year and brought with her the reinsurance experience she's gained from her time in Florida. We have seen two years of dramatic pricing increases in catastrophe reinsurance costs and expected this year to be even worse. We needed to be prepared. One strategy we deployed to reduce cost was to slow core new business writings of the highest cost policies, those contributing the most to our P&L. This strategy was successful, and this allowed us to buy to a lower limit while maintaining the same risk tolerance, and as such, the increase to ceded premiums was minimized. I also want to mention our relentless focus on improving our cost structure. I am delighted that we have made such great progress in this area. We have achieved our goal for the year, a net expense ratio of 33, a 4.2 percentage point reduction from the prior year. But our focus will not wane. We all recognize the benefits of having low expenses, and we will have a new stretch goal through 2024 to reduce expenses below 30%. With that, I'll now pass the call over to Jen to review our third quarter results. Jen?