Thanks, Tom. Good morning, everyone. A significant amount of our focus for the last few quarters has been on the balance sheet. So I'm going to start there and cover loans on Slide 4. Total loans are at $3.9 billion with an average yield of 6.6%. Loans have declined $55 million from December 31, '24. $50 million of that was commercial loans. While in prior quarters loan sales were completed to remove some risk for the balance sheet, payoffs are what drove the reduction in first quarter of '25. Payoff activity and normal amortization outpaced $116 million of commercial loan production. Most of the payoffs were for loans which didn't fit the long-term credit profile of the bank. There were CRE loans within these payoffs that didn't fully align based on credit risk. This along with prior quarter actions significantly reduced our CRE concentration level. We're now well positioned to deploy capital and excess liquidity towards prudent loan production. Moving to Slide 5, you can see that deposits have remained stable around $4.6 billion since the merger and the cost is at 2.14%. The sales team has done an excellent job retaining the acquired deposits from the Codorus acquisition. For the first quarter of 2025, deposits grew by -- about $11 million. One of the bigger challenges for us and really every other bank out there in this rate cycle has been retaining or replacing promotional deposits as they mature. While we saw a decrease of $48 million in CDs and $37 million in money markets in the first quarter, we also experienced strong growth of about $95 million as demand deposits balances. At March 31 '25 non-interest bearing deposits represented 20% of total deposits. So we continue to see some, some improvement there. With the shift from higher yielding promotional deposits, we believe there will be further reductions in funding costs to benefit the margin. The 84% loan to deposit ratio provides us with sufficient liquidity to fund our growing loan pipeline without placing a heavy reliance on alternative funding resources. Another opportunity for allocating our liquidity is the investment portfolio. You can see on Slide 6 that our investment book is now up to $856 million. We purchased about $40 million of securities in the first quarter and we'll continue to evaluate opportunities going forward to allocate our liquidity to higher yielding assets. The current market volatility does create opportunities to enhance the portfolio which continues to generate a very strong average yield at 4.65%. The duration remains relatively short at 4.3 years and net unrealized losses are just 3% of the book balance at March 31, '25. This takes us to our net interest income -- net interest margin slide on Slide 7. Our margin remains very strong, 4% even. This includes about 51 basis points of net purchase account accretion impact in the first quarter. It was about 52 basis points in the fourth quarter. I remain cautious in predicting the trajectory of the margin, given pricing and competition for both loans and deposits and the overall economic uncertainty. But there is upside potential faced on where our deposit rates are positioned. As I pointed out previously, as the fed funds rate has declined, our loan yields have declined faster than our deposit costs. That's been a function of both the competitive environment and our client retention efforts coming out of the merger and the system conversion. This is evident in the graph on the top right on the slide showing the change in interest bearing deposit cost as compared to fed funds over the past year. You can see that the cost was elevated in 3Q '24 from some higher cost acquired deposits but has come down since that point. With flat rates at this point in time, there is opportunity here to improve margin if we can maintain good yields on new loans. We do continue to remain asset sensitive. On Slide 8, fee income was up about $400,000 from the prior quarter. This is mainly driven by wealth management which generated some additional income in the first quarter. I anticipate wealth management income to drop some in the second quarter. Given where the stock market has been, there continues to be uncertainty there. Service charges are up. As I mentioned in the prior quarter we paused some fees for a few months post conversion. Most of those fees were reactivated in the first quarter with some residual carrying into the second quarter. Mortgage banking income decreased by about $300,000 due to a decrease in the mortgage servicing rights valuation. This was driven by market rates. One other item of note is the commercial lending team had another strong quarter of originating swaps for clients. This doesn't always pop out in the numbers because it's volume and balance based, but the team remains very focused on driving more fee income. Fee income in general remains a focal point for us. For the first quarter it was a 19% of total revenues, but our goal remains to be -- to exceed 20%. Moving to expenses on Slide 9. As previously indicated, we've taken the necessary steps to achieve our announced cost savings from the merger for the go forward run rate from June 30, 2025. With less noise expected in the second quarter, this will become more evident, and I expect the efficiency ratio to drop further as a result. Merger related expenses were $1.6 million in the first quarter. This is expected to be the final quarter with significant costs associated with the merger. There are also additional expenses that have been incurred associated with providing additional support as we work through the system conversions. These costs are expected to decline in the second quarter. However, as we've stated in the past, we will continue to take advantage of opportunities to invest in talent, to build the infrastructure necessary to reach the next few stages of our growth trajectory. We've done some of that already, as Tom referenced earlier, and expect that further investments will be made to improve our operational efficiency. Also, as always, if the opportunity arises, we'll evaluate either individual or team revenue producers if we believe they align with our strategic vision and can be accretive. Our credit quality is covered on Slide 10, as a result of the reduction in loan balances, a negative provision was required during the quarter. This again is indicative of our conscious steps that we have taken to reduce risk in a loan portfolio. Classified loans declined by 14%, and non-accruals were down as well. Our allowance coverage ratio was 1.23% at March 31, 2025, which remains near the top of our peer group and we believe adequately addresses the risk of loss in the loan portfolio. Slide 11, highlights our key performance metrics. There were substantial increases in adjusted EPS to a $1.0 per share, adjusted ROA and ROE as mentioned by Tom from the prior quarter. We have the opportunity to continue to improve from there. In addition, from a capital standpoint, TCE is nearing 8%. If you recall, when the merger closed in July, we acknowledged that our capital ratios were below peer levels due to purchase accounting marks. As shown on Slide 12, through a combination of the higher post-merger earnings and various actions taken with the balance sheet, the regulatory capital ratios are approaching pre-merger levels. We believe we're in a strong position for continued growth and at the same time expect to continue to build these ratios at a good pace. I'll now turn the call back over to Adam Metz to discuss our strategic focus going forward on Slide 13. Adam?