Thank you Jenny. Good morning everyone. I’d like to welcome you to our first quarter earnings call for our fiscal year 2023, and happy new year to you all. We have a slide deck for this. If you can surf over to our website at purecyclewater.com on the landing page, you’ll find a button on there where you can click on that and then we will actually forward through the slides, but it will give you the ability to see some of the text in the slides within the presentation. With that, I’m also joined today this morning by Kevin McNeill, our CFO, and Dirk Lashnits, our Vice President and Director of Land Development, who will also give you updates into some of the business segments and the financial reportings, and then at the end we’ll have a brief Q&A for those of you who want to drill down on some of the specifics. With that, let me first start with our Safe Harbor statement, which I’m sure most of you are familiar with. Statements that are not historical facts that are contained or incorporated by reference in this presentation are forward-looking statements. With that, we’ll get the lawyers out of the room and we’ll start. I’ll just be very brief on some of the overview of the company, but for those of you that are first-timers to the call or new to the company, we really operate on three primary business segments, really that are fundamentally interconnected to each other at the DNA level of the company. We’re a water-wastewater utility company, where we own water in a water-short region here in the State of Colorado and the west. We develop those water rights and we are cradle-to-grave on the water rights, where we develop the wells, the distribution system, put that water to use in both the land segment, which is a parcel of property that we own that we’re doing a master planned community on and we’re building lots for our homebuilder customers, and then we are holding back some of those lots and building homes on those for the single-family rental segment as well, so each of those segments really are interrelated to a vertically integrated platform that we have from the water utility side. Moving on to just describe a little bit briefly about the water segment itself, we have just that whole network of utility operations, where we have the diversions for the water supply, whether those are taking water sources from our streams and surface water supplies, our groundwater supplies or our reuse supplies. We treat that water, we store it, we distribute that out to our customers. We’re also responsible for some of the development of that distribution system pursuant to our design standards for our community, which is some of the lands that we have but others as well, so we have master planned service areas that are very valuable, which we will highlight a little bit later in the presentation. Our customers use that water, they give it back to us, we collect that, we treat it and then we reuse it, so we have a use and reuse model. Within that, we get some fee instruments for that on the water utility side. We get connection charges, which are a one-time connection fee which, between the water and the sewer tap fee, are around $32,000, $33,000, and those are paid by the homebuilder, our homebuilder customers, and those are typically added into the cost of the home, but that grants the service connection a permanent entitlement to the water supply and then we get usage fees for that, so we get a base fee which really amortizes some of the cost of operating and maintaining a system, and then a consumption charge which is a tiered consumption charge, and so what this tends to do is it tries to encourage conservation, because the more water you use, the more water--the higher the cost of the water supply. As you take a look at our water balance, what we look to do is really keep control over that drop of water, where we’re taking that from the supply, we’re treating it, we’re putting it into our system, we’re getting it back from our system, and then we’re reusing that, and so we do have a very closed loop system. We do lose a little bit to outdoor irrigation and some evaporation, but those trends are really decreasing and there’s been a lot of press, I’m sure much of you have seen, about drought and the vulnerabilities of water supply on the left, so the company’s emphasis on technology and controlling that drop of water through its continuous life cycle is very important to our systems, and we want to make sure that we’re good stewards of this water supply. Taking a little bit of the infrastructure, you know, we build this infrastructure. It’s long-lived assets. The water supplies certainly are long-lived - those are perpetual, and then you have a lot of the brick and mortar that we’re building associated with that, and really this is showing the growth of the company in the last five or six years, really showing about an 86% growth in the capitalized asset class and the various categories of that infrastructure, whether that’s water and wastewater treatment facilities, transmission lines, wells, finished water storage, surface water, groundwater supplies, distribution systems, all the components of a water utility you’ll find in there, so that will continue to grow as we keep seeing that. Moving into how the growth of the utility looks like, our current customer count is up to about 1,250 new connections. We measure that in terms of the number of single family equivalent connections on it, and so we have a combination of residential customers which would be a standard single family equivalent, but then we also have commercial and irrigation connections attributable to those, and so just because you might have one irrigation connection, that might represent as many as a couple hundred as you see down in Lowry, because we have large irrigation requirements down there of connections. We rate that to the number of how we build those out, so the number of base charges that we get for each of those. I talked a little bit about our residential connections at Sky Ranch, which is our development. We have our first phase, which is completely built out, 500 homes. We are into our second phase, very robust tap sales in our second phase - Dirk will drill down into that a little bit, but we’ve got 124 taps there, and then a service area that we picked up a couple of years back, where we have more than 200 connections between the residential and the commercial connections as well. Moving on, another one of our big customers on the utility side is the industrial space, where we sell a lot of water to the oil and gas industry through a number of different operators. Our water supply, our service areas, and really--you know, the City of Colorado is located over a fairly prolific oil and gas field that’s gotten a little bit more attention more recently with the shale oil play, but we are seeing operators drill a number of pads in a number of formations here that consume a tremendous amount of water for oil and gas, and so we continue to see those sales. This is the distribution of how those sales go by quarter, and as you can see, it’s kind of all over the map. There’s not a lot of predictability to it. They drill year round, they frac year round, and a lot of this is really dependent on a permitting process and how aggressive they are. The leasehold interest particularly in our particular field has changed hands a number of times, which is pretty typical in the oil and gas industry, but it started out probably in 2015, ’16 time frame with a lot of the field assessment and field definition, and now it’s kind of moved into more of a well development, so they’re developing the field, so they don’t do a lot of exploration, they don’t do a lot of changing to it. Each rig has a much stronger capacity to drill more wells per pad per year, and so what we’re seeing is when you get a dedicated rig out here, that can drill as much as 25 to 30 wells a year. They’re pretty significant wells. They’re two mile lateral wells on this thing. I think they’re experimenting with some three-mile lateral wells on it, and so they’ll continue to increase the amount of water that they’re using, depending on their laterals on it. This is kind of an illustration, if you look at the right-hand side of this, that will be kind of the Denver metropolitan area and kind of the growth of the metropolitan area. The two red areas or pink areas that you see in there, those are service areas. If you look at the one, kind of transition between the green and the grey there, that’s our Sky Ranch project, which is ideally located - it’s on the I-70 corridor, and it really is in the strongest area of growth in the Denver metropolitan area, and we as a developer are really targeting the entry level housing product, which I think inures very well for us both in very strong markets as well as in challenging markets, and so Dirk will talk a little bit more about that. Then our service area at Lowry, it’s the very large pink area which continues to be really an untapped asset for us. The land is owned by the State of Colorado in trust for the public education system here, and it’s one of the most unique assemblages of land in the country. As you can see by the picture on the left there, most of the development has really come up to the border of that property, and so it depends on how the state looks to move forward with that, but that’s certainly an opportunity for us over the next few years that we look forward to doing the utilities for that. We’re the exclusive water-wastewater provider for that 24,000 acres of continuous property. That gives you kind of a sense of the utility side and some of the segments that we have in there. I’m going to hand this off to Dirk Lashnits, who will talk a little bit about our land development activities.