Thank you, Jeff, and good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We had another quarter of strong operating results and leasing momentum. We continue to see high retailer demand with no current signs of slowing down. PECO's leasing team continues to convert retailer demand into high occupancy with higher rents at our centers. Portfolio occupancy remained high and ended the quarter at 97.2% leased. Anchor occupancy remained high at 98.4%. And during the quarter, we executed 5 anchor leases, including Ulta Beauty at Hilfiger Shopping Center, Five Below at Bear Creek Plaza Crunch Fitness at Kirkwood Marketplace and 2 Med tail uses, Rise Center and Ocean Breeze Plaza and a medical center at Colonial Promenade. In the first quarter, we received 6 anchor boxes back. We currently have just 15 vacant anchor spaces in our portfolio. Importantly, we are able to drive significantly higher rents on these units. For reference, these 6 spaces had an average ABR of $8.06 and the 5 we executed this quarter had an average ABR of $18.37 a 128% average increase. Activity for anchor leases currently out for signature is extremely positive, and we are currently experiencing the strongest anchor demand we've seen in over 20 years. Inline occupancy ended the quarter at 94.8%, an increase of 50 basis points year-over-year and a sequential increase of 10 basis points from the fourth quarter. New neighbors added in the first quarter included quick-service restaurants, such as Nashville Hot Chicken, the -- great Greek, Starbucks and Wingstop, several med tail uses, health and beauty retailers such as hand in stone, solar salons and other necessity-based goods and services. Our acquisitions in the first quarter were 96% leased at closing. -- buying centers with some vacancy will continue to allow us to drive growth. Given PECO's unique external growth strategy, we have added new disclosures for same center leased and economic occupancy, which you can find in our supplemental information packet. We continue to believe that we can push same-center inline occupancy another 100 to 150 basis points given the continued strong retailer demand. In terms of new lease activity, we continue to have success in driving higher rents. Comparable new rent spreads for the first quarter were 29.1%. Our inline new rent spreads were a record high 37.4% in the first quarter, which compares to our trailing 12-month average of 27.7%. We continue to capitalize on strong renewal demand and are making the most of the opportunity to improve lease language at renewal and drive rents higher. In the first quarter, we achieved a 16.9% increase in comparable renewal rent spreads. Our inline renewal spreads remained high at 19.2% in the first quarter, which compares to our trailing 12-month average of 18.2%. The -- these increases and spreads reflect the continued strength of the leasing and retention environment. We expect new and renewal spreads to continue to be strong throughout the balance of this year and into the foreseeable future. Progress continues in terms of [ neighbor ] retention and while growing rents at attractive rates. PECO's retention rate remained strong in the first quarter. Our inline retention rate is 83%, well ahead of the historical 5-year average of 78%. Higher retention means less downtime and lower TI spend. In the first quarter, we spent only $0.54 per square foot of tenant improvements for renewals. We also remain successful at driving higher contractual rent increases. Our new and renewal inline leases executed in the first quarter had average annual contractual rent bumps of 2% and 3%, respectively, another important contributor to our long-term growth. The leasing spreads that we are achieving and the strength of our leasing pipeline are clear evidence of the continued high demand for space in our grocery-anchored neighborhood shopping centers. PECO's pricing power is a reflection of the strength of our focused strategy and the quality of our portfolio. PECO continues to benefit from a number of positive macroeconomic trends that create strong tailwinds and drive robust neighbor demand. These trends include a resilient consumer hybrid work migration to the Sunbelt, population shifts that favor suburban neighborhoods and the importance of physical locations and last-mile delivery. The impact of these demand factors are further amplified due to limited new supply over the last 10 years and going forward, given that current economic returns do not justify new construction. A healthy mix of national, regional and local retailers adds many benefits to our grocery-anchored portfolio. 70% of our rents come from neighbors offering necessity-based goods and services, and our top grocers continue to drive strong reoccurring foot traffic to our centers. PECO's 3-mile trade area demographics include an average population of 67,000 people and an average median household income of 87,000, which is 12% higher than the U.S. median. These demographics are in line with the store demographics of Kroger and Publix, which are PECO's top 2 neighbors. Our centers are situated in trade areas where our top grocers are profitable and our neighbors are successful. We also enjoy a well-diversified neighbor base. Our top neighbor list is comprised of the best grocers in the country. Our largest non-grocer neighbor makes up only 1.2% of our rents, and that neighbor is T.J. Maxx. All other nongrocery neighbors are below 1% of ABR. To put a finer point on Neighbor mix, PECO has no exposure to luxury retail and very limited exposure to distressed retailers. Our top 10 neighbors currently on our watch list represent just 2% of ABR with no one retailer representing more than 40 basis points of ABR -- while our bad debt was slightly elevated in the first quarter, we actively monitor the health of our neighbors. We are not concerned about bad debt in the near term, particularly given the strong retailer demand. To note, this is not attributed to national bankruptcies as we don't have any meaningful concentrations. From an operations standpoint, we have always taken an aggressive stance to get spaces back. And in today's environment, the PECO team is taking an even more aggressive stance on opportunities where we can get higher spreads. We are setting 40% inline rent spreads on the units we are getting back. 27% of our ABR is derived from local neighbors. The majority of our local neighbor rents come from retailers offering necessity-based goods and services. Our local neighbors, are successful businesses run by hard-working entrepreneurs, they have healthy credit and are less susceptible to corporate bankruptcy caused by weaker performing locations. Local neighbors offer favorable economic returns. A typical local retailer receives less capital at the beginning of their lease accepts more PECO friendly lease terms and has high retention rates. PECO retained 85% of local neighbors in the first quarter. For inline local neighbors, renewal rent spreads remained strong at 20.2%. Importantly, local retailers meaningfully differentiate the merchandise mix that our neighborhood centers offer our customers. Our inline local neighbors are resilient and have been in our shopping centers for 9.7 years on average. In addition to our strong rental growth trends, we continue to expand our pipeline of ground-up outparcel development and repositioning projects. During the first quarter, we stabilized 4 projects and delivered over 180,000 square feet of space to our neighbors. These 4 projects add incremental NOI of approximately 2.3 million annually. They provide superior risk-adjusted returns and have a meaningful impact in our long-term NOI growth. We continue to expect to invest $40 million to $50 million annually in ground-up development and repositioning opportunities with weighted average cash-on-cash yields between 9% and 12%. This activity remains a great use of free cash flow and produces attractive returns with less risk. Our team continues to stay focused on growing this pipeline as the returns are accretive to the portfolio. In summary, the PECO team remains optimistic given the current strong operating environment and the continued positive momentum we are experiencing across leasing, redevelopment and development. Our healthy neighbor mix and grocery-anchored strategy positions PECO well for continued growth. The overall demand environment, the stability of our centers, the strength of our grocers and the capabilities of our team gives us great confidence in our ability to continue to deliver solid operating results. I will now turn the call over to John. John?