Thank you, Betsy. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our call today. This morning, we reported diluted earnings per share of $0.59 for the second quarter of 2025. We had improvements in our quarterly results in many areas, including annualized loan growth of 11%. Our net interest income increased over $2 million while our net interest margin expanded three basis points, which includes reductions in accretion income of nearly $1 million. For the second quarter, accretion income added 12 basis points to net interest margin compared to 17 basis points for the linked quarter. This is the fourth straight quarter that we have had core net interest margin expansion, which excludes accretion income. Our fee-based income was relatively stable as improvements in several areas mostly offset the reduction in insurance income due to the annual performance-based insurance commissions we recognized in the first quarter. Our noninterest expense declined and was within our guided range. Our pre-provision net revenue exceeded consensus estimates for the quarter, and our tangible equity to tangible assets ratio was stable at 8.3%. During the second quarter, our overall allowance for credit losses grew $9.4 million to 1.13% of total loans. This increase in our ratio puts us more in line with the median of our peers, which was at 1.17% at March 31. For the second quarter, our provision for credit losses totaled $16.6 million, an increase of $6.5 million from the linked quarter. Our second quarter provision for credit losses was comprised of $7 million in net charge-offs, which was down from $8.1 million for the linked quarter, a $3.8 million increase in reserves on individually analyzed loans, a $2.5 million increase in reserves on small ticket leases, a $2.3 million net increase related to a periodic refresh in our loss drivers utilized within the CECL model, and the remainder of the increase was due to the deterioration in economic forecast coupled with loan growth during the quarter. For more information on our provision for credit loss, please refer to our accompanying slide. Our annualized quarterly net charge-off rate was 43 basis points, an improvement from 52 basis points for the linked quarter. The reduction was driven by lower small ticket leasing charge-offs. As we mentioned last quarter, we expected a reduction in our charge-offs from our small ticket leasing business, but that they would remain elevated. We were down from $5.4 million in net charge-offs for the previous quarter to $4.8 million for this quarter. For the second quarter, our annualized net charge-off rate for the small ticket leasing business was 11.51% compared to 11.97% for the first quarter and down from the peak of 13.35% for the fourth quarter of 2024. For additional details on our small ticket leasing business, please refer to the accompanying slides in our presentation. Our nonperforming assets increased a little over $800,000 and were 49 basis points of total assets compared to 50 basis points at March 31. The increase was due to higher balances in ninety or more days past due and accruing, and was due to increases mostly within our premium finance portfolio. The past due premium finance loans are mostly due to the timing of the receipt of expected proceeds from carriers on canceled policies, which we have noted previously on occasion as administrative delinquencies. These increases were partially offset by lower nonaccrual loans. Our criticized loans grew $18 million, which was largely due to the downgrade of one commercial relationship. We are optimistic that we will be able to exit this credit with little loss exposure. Our classified loan balances as a percent of total loans declined to 1.89% compared to 1.93% at March 31. Our second quarter delinquency rates improved, as the portion of our loan portfolio considered current was 99.1% compared to 98.5% at the linked quarter end. At this point, we have not observed impacts to our loan growth or credit metrics from the tariffs. But we continue to closely monitor our portfolio for the potential effects tariffs to both. We have experienced increased loan demand, which was reflected in our pipelines last quarter in our loan growth this quarter. Moving on to loan balances, we have loan growth of $173 million, or 11% annualized compared to the linked quarter end. We had balanced loan growth in all categories, which included commercial and industrial loans of $64 million, residential real estate loans of $30 million, construction loans of $22 million, commercial real estate loans of $18 million, premium finance loans of $14 million, and consumer indirect loans of $12 million. We had lease balance growth of $5 million during the quarter, which was driven by our mid-ticket leasing business. At quarter end, our commercial real estate loans comprised 34% of total loans, about 35% of which were owner-occupied, while the remainder were investment real estate. At quarter end, 46% of our total loans were fixed rate, with the remaining 54% at a variable rate. I will now turn the call over to Katie for a brief discussion of our financial performance.