Thank you, Brent, and good morning, everyone. We are pleased to report inspiring clinical and operational results driven by local leaders across Pennant. We have continued to execute at our existing operations even during a period of record-breaking growth. In our Home Health and Hospice segment, we experienced strong organic growth, successful transitions, improving margin, and excellent clinical outcomes. Top line segment revenue was $125.3 million, an increase of $30.3 million or 31.9%, and adjusted EBITDA was $19.6 million, an increase of $5.2 million or 36.3%, each over the prior year quarter. On the Hospice side, we continued to make exceptional progress. Hospice revenue was $59.3 million, an increase of $12.8 million or 27.5% over the prior year quarter. Hospice admits rose 31.4%. Average daily census rose 29.1% and length of stay increased 4.3%, each over the prior year quarter, which more than offset a 2.6% reduction in revenue per day over the same period, driven primarily by census growth in states with lower per-day reimbursement. The growth flywheel continued to turn at our mature operations as same-store admissions grew 15.3% and ADC increased 14.8%, each over the prior year quarter. This double-digit growth reflects the latent potential across our portfolio as our mature operations continue to become a provider and employer of choice in the communities they serve. Our Home Health business experienced similar progress. Home Health revenue grew to $66 million, an increase of $17.5 million or 36.1% over the prior year quarter. Total Home Health admissions increased 35.4% and Medicare admissions increased 18.3%, each over the prior year quarter. Revenue per episode increased 6.6% over the prior year as we admitted more patients in higher reimbursement states along the West Coast, diversified our referral source pipelines and effectively managed episodes at the local level. Much like our Hospice business, our mature Home Health operations continued their impressive growth as same-store admits increased 18.6%, Medicare admits increased 6%, and revenue per episode increased 2.9%, each over the prior year quarter. Even as we welcome new operations with lower average quality ratings, our clinical quality remained excellent with an average CMS star rating of 4.1 compared to the national average of 3.0 and a reported acute care hospitalization rate of 13.3%, which compares favorably to the national average of 14.1%. We also remain focused on CMS' Home Health Value-Based Purchasing program, where we are monitoring our performance against the value-based purchasing criteria and expect to experience positive revenue impact at our mature operations. On the regulatory front, CMS recently issued its final hospice rule with a 2.9% increase in revenue per day versus the 2.6% increase it initially proposed. As applied to Pennant, our modeling of the rule's impact anticipates an increase in our revenue per day of 2.93%. In late June, CMS issued the proposed 2025 home health rule, which applies a negative behavioral adjustment of 4.1% offset by a market basket increase of 2.5%, yielding a projected net negative impact of 1.7%. We are disappointed in CMS' proposal, which uses flawed methodology and does not reflect the ongoing and significant increases in the cost of providing valuable home health services. Since 2013, revenue per home health patient has grown approximately 10.2% while the consumer price index has increased 36.5% over the same period. These conflicting trends have already begun to threaten access to care and push patients into more expensive and less appropriate care settings. Along with our industry partners, we will advocate aggressively for CMS to acknowledge the important role that home health services play in reducing the nation's aggregate Medicare spend. As we address this challenge, we are mindful of the fact that CMS' 2024 proposed rule was similarly bleak with an initial deep cut. But after further consideration, CMS finalized a more reasonable and slightly net positive rate update. Whatever the results of the 2025 final rule may be, our local operators will remain focused on operating and controlling the things they can control. Our operating model has proven adaptable through periods of reimbursement challenge. We know the need for our services and the value they provide to our patients and the post-acute care continuum. And we will resolutely work to pull the right cost management levers and grow in this ever-changing reimbursement environment. Our Senior Living segment is stable and growing as revenue improved to $43.4 million, an increase of $6.2 million or 16.6% over the prior year quarter. Adjusted EBITDA improved to $4.1 million, up $0.5 million or 14.8% increase over the prior year quarter. Same-store occupancy remains strong at 79.2%, and average monthly revenue per occupied room rose to $4,753, an increase of $363 or 8.3% over the prior year quarter. Our occupancy rate growth remained steady with an overall increase of 80 basis points and a slight softening in same-store occupancy of 40 basis points, each over the prior year quarter, as we continued to focus on rate and revenue quality. Our investment in recruiting and developing strong local leaders underpins these financial improvements, contributing to the segment's operational maturity. Quality leadership is central to our operating model. And as leaders deepen their experience and continue to execute on the fundamentals of the business, we expect ongoing acceleration in performance. As Brent discussed, in 2024, we have accelerated our pace of new acquisitions and partnerships. Our ability to acquire and transition new operations while also executing successfully at our existing operations is made possible by the significant investment we have made to recruit and develop leaders and build strong clusters and markets. We do not have a typical centralized acquisition team. Instead, we rely on a decentralized model that encourages local leaders to make acquisition decisions with the support of expert resources. Robust local clusters facilitate growth even as we transition new operations in 1 market. Leaders in other markets have independent bandwidth to tackle additional opportunities. Our management agreement with Hartford HealthCare represents an exciting step in our development as a key partner to leading health systems. Pennant will manage and support the Hartford HealthCare home business with over 1,000 employees and which generated more than 33,000 home health admissions and 4,000 hospice admissions over the 12 months preceding the agreement. Pennant will receive a management fee for its services, which will include the sharing of our unique operating model, training and development of leaders, implementation of our technology systems and operational best practices, along with support for IT, HR and related back-office functions. The scale of this collaboration is significant and it allows us to meaningfully invest in creating an East Coast service center. As we work with Hartford HealthCare to strengthen and grow its home health and hospice business, we also have the opportunity to share in the value we create and build a strong presence with the potential to expand to other communities in the eastern United States. We look forward to collaborating with Hartford HealthCare to innovate and improve access to home health and hospice services in Connecticut. After quarter end, we announced the acquisition of Signature Healthcare at Home, a leading provider of home health and hospice services in the Pacific Northwest. The first stage of this transaction, which includes Signature's operations in Idaho and Washington, closed on August 1. And the second stage, the Oregon operations is expected to close on January 1, 2025 after certain regulatory approvals are completed. We are excited to welcome the Signature operations to the Pennant family. We have immense respect for Signature and its leaders with whom we have developed a relationship over several years, ultimately leading to this unique opportunity. This strategically important acquisition grows our presence in Washington, a certificate of need state, and complements our existing footprint in Oregon and Idaho. Signature has a well-earned reputation for clinical excellence and is a prominent provider in its markets. The future is bright in the Pacific Northwest as we combine Signature's legacy with Pennant's unique operating model and existing strength in the region. With that, I'll hand it over to Lynette for a review of the financials. Lynette?