Thanks, Jeff, and again, good morning, everyone. I'm starting on Slide 4, and we'll take a look at our loan portfolio. Our total loans increased $256 million from the end of the prior quarter. The strongest growth came in the commercial real estate portfolio, which increased 10% during the second quarter. We also had small increases across most of our other portfolios, which were partially offset by declines in commercial FHA warehouse credit lines and the continued forgiveness of PPP loans. During the second quarter, we began to originate loans through our new fintech partnership with LendingPoint, which accounted for the growth we had in the consumer loan portfolio. Turning now to Slide 5. We'll look at our deposits. Total deposits increased $127 million from the end of the prior quarter, a portion of which was attributable to the FNBC branch acquisition that Jeff previously discussed. We had an increase in noninterest-bearing deposits and all of our lower-cost interest-bearing deposits, while our time deposits were essentially unchanged during the period. Our commercial banking and treasury management teams are doing a good job of developing new commercial deposit relationships that are providing a steady inflow of lower-cost deposits to fund our strong loan growth. Turning now to Slide 6. We'll walk through the trends in our net interest income and margin. Our net interest income increased 7.9% from the prior quarter primarily due to the higher average loan balances and the increase in our net interest margin. We brought down our average cash balances by $158 million and our investment securities portfolio by $76 million from the end of the prior quarter with those funds redeployed into the loan portfolio to support our strong loan growth. This favorable shift in our mix of earning assets as well as higher average rates on cash, investment securities and loans helped drive a 15 basis point increase in our net interest margin. As interest rates increase, we're seeing improvement in new loan pricing, which is also positively impacting our net interest margin. In the month of June, the average rate on our new and renewed loans was 4.79%, an increase of 69 basis points from the month of March. In particular, we are seeing significantly higher rates on commercial loans, which includes our Midland Equipment Financing. Turning to Slide 7. We'll look at trends in our wealth management business. Our assets under administration decreased by $446 million from the end of the prior quarter primarily due to market performance. The decrease in assets under administration resulted in lower wealth management revenue in the second quarter. On Slide 8, we'll review our noninterest income. We had $14.6 million in noninterest income in the second quarter, a decrease of 6.4% from the prior quarter. The decrease was primarily due to the lower wealth management revenue, which offset increases in deposit service charges and interchange revenue resulting from the growth in our client base. Now turning to Slide 9, and we'll review our noninterest expense. On an adjusted basis, excluding integration and acquisition expenses, our noninterest expense was up slightly from the prior quarter primarily due to higher salaries and benefits expense resulting from a modest increase in staffing levels and higher incentive compensation. With the completion of the FNBC branch acquisition, we'll have a slight increase in expenses in the third quarter, but they should remain within the range of $41 million to $42 million that we have previously guided for a run rate in 2022. As we have done over the past couple of years, we continue to have opportunities to renegotiate vendor contracts to help us generate cost savings to offset the increases we are seeing in labor costs and the investments we're making in various initiatives to grow and further diversify the company. We're also continuing to leverage our technology investments to drive more automation throughout the organization in order to further improve efficiencies and control expenses. Turning now to Slide 10. We'll look at our asset quality trends. Our nonperforming loans increased $4 million from the end of the prior quarter, which was attributable to one commercial real estate loan where no loss is currently expected. Outside of this one credit, trends in the portfolio were generally favorable with continued upgrades of watch-list loans as more borrowers demonstrate sustained performance with the impact of the pandemic declining. While there is broader concern about how inflation and higher interest rates will impact customers through June 30, the delinquency rate in our consumer portfolio remains exceptionally low and has actually declined a bit since the beginning of the year. And should any deterioration begin to occur, we have approximately $39 million in an escrow account that is available to cover any losses on the GreenSky portfolio. We had $2.8 million in charge-offs in the quarter or 20 basis points of average loans, and we recorded a provision for credit losses on loans of $4.7 million, which was largely related to the growth in total loans and changes in our economic forecast. Now on Slide 11, we show the components of a change in our allowance for credit losses from the end of the prior quarter. Our allowance for credit losses increased by approximately $2 million. This increase was driven by the growth in total loans, changes in the mix of the portfolio and changes in forecasts from weakening economic conditions. On Slide 12, we show our ACL broken out by portfolio. While our overall coverage ratio remained relatively stable, we increased coverage a bit within the commercial portfolio, primarily due to changes in economic variables and forecast. And with that, I will turn the call back over to Jeff. Jeff?