Thanks, Tom, and good morning, everyone. I'll begin with our key operating metrics for the quarter, followed by our balance sheet, cash flows and backlog, and I'll end with our guidance. As Tom mentioned, our third quarter revenue was a record for Primoris, reaching approximately $1.3 billion, a new record for the second consecutive quarter, and an increase of $371 million or 41% compared to the prior year and an increase of $261 million or 26% from the second quarter of 2022. This is driven by continued strength in our growth markets, including solar, communications and power delivery, partially offset by weakness in Pipeline Services. Our Utilities segment increased $158 million or 34.8%, primarily driven by increased revenues with existing customers in power delivery, contributions from new PLH customers and expansion of our communications business. Energy/Renewables revenue grew by $249 million or 71.1% primarily due to solar revenue that increased almost 100% and healthy growth in our industrials business. Pipeline Services revenue decreased by $37 million from last year due to continued challenges in the midstream sector that has led to fewer projects moving forward and are being more selective in the customers we work with and the projects we bid. Gross profit for the third quarter was almost $155 million, an increase of $27 million from the prior year, driven primarily by strong contributions from solar, improved industrial's profitability and the addition of PLH and B Comm, partially offset by the decline in pipeline. Gross profit as a percentage of revenue was 12.1% for the quarter compared to 14% in the prior year. This is primarily due to challenges in the Pipeline segment and slightly lower utility margins, partially offset by better Energy/Renewables margins. Now let's look at each of the three segments. In our Utilities segment, gross profit was $78 million or $14.3 million increase from the prior year due to higher revenues in power delivery and communications and $10 million from the B Comm and PLH acquisitions. Gross margins declined to 12.7% compared to 14% in the prior year due to the inflationary impacts of higher fuel and labor costs during 2022. And we saw a significant improvement from the second quarter due to the rate adjustments we negotiated. We are continuing to work with our remaining customers to negotiate rate adjustments that should go into effect over the next few quarters, but their impact will be much less than what we have seen in Q3. Looking at Q4, we expect to see our normal seasonal decline in gross margins to the 9% to 11% range depending on weather. Energy/Renewables gross profit was $80.1 million for the quarter, a $44.2 million increase from the prior year, primarily due to higher renewables and industrial revenue and margins. Gross margins also increased over 300 basis points to 13.3%, primarily due to some project closeout in our solar business and significant improvement in the execution of projects in our industrials business. Looking at Q4, we expect gross margins to trend toward the normal 10% to 12% range. Pipeline segment gross profit decreased by $31.1 million from the prior year due to decline in revenues, which continued to drive underabsorption of segment fixed costs. As a result, gross margins were negative 4.6% compared to 25.8% in the prior year, which benefited from the closeout of multiple pipeline projects. Looking to Q4, we expect to see gross margins in the low to mid-single digits as we begin executing new work and make progress toward reducing our segment fixed overhead costs. SG&A expenses in the third quarter were $75.7 million, an increase of $14 million over the prior year due to additional support costs we assumed through our acquisitions. However, as a percentage of revenue, SG&A decreased to 5.9% compared to 6.8% in the prior year, primarily due to our revenue growth. We expect our SG&A will continue to remain in the low 6% range for the full year. Transaction and integration costs were $12.7 million for the quarter, primarily related to the acquisition of PLH. Net interest expense in the third quarter was $13.1 million compared to $4.7 million in the prior year. The increase was primarily due to higher average debt balances from the completion of the PLH acquisition, as well as higher average interest rates. Our effective tax rate was 18.6% for the quarter, and year-to-date, it is 19.6%. The reduction in our effective tax rate is driven by the use of capital losses to offset capital gains on real estate and a change in the mix of states in which we work. We expect our effective tax rate for the full year to be 19.6% as well, but this may vary depending on the mix of states in which we work. Net cash used in operating activities for the first nine months of the year was $102 million, an increase of only $10.9 million in Q3. This use of cash was driven by the investment in working capital to support our revenue growth, the investment we continue to make in buying materials for our solar projects, which is roughly $80 million year-to-date, partially offset by a reduction in DSOs from improved collections and improved terms with vendors and suppliers. In the third quarter, we invested $9.9 million in CapEx, and we expect to spend $20 million to $30 million in Q4, of which $15 million to $25 million would be for equipment. We ended the quarter with $111.9 million of cash. Borrowing capacity under our amended revolving credit facility was $126.6 million, and total available liquidity was $238.5 million. And net debt increased to $1.1 billion at the end of third quarter following the close of the PLH acquisition. Looking at backlog, total backlog at the end of the quarter was a record $5.5 billion, an increase of $900 million from the second quarter and nearly doubled year-over-year. Fixed backlog was $3.4 billion, an increase of $605 million during the quarter, driven by new solar and pipeline awards and roughly $200 million of added backlog from PLH. MSA backlog increased $296 million during the quarter to $2.1 billion, primarily driven by the acquisition of PLH. Turning to our full year earnings guidance, we are adjusting our estimate of GAAP EPS down slightly to $2.31 to $2.51 per share, directly related to incremental depreciation, amortization and transaction and integration costs due to the PLH acquisition. However, we are maintaining our adjusted EPS guidance of $2.39 to $2.59 per share. We saw the timing of certain work pulled into Q3 from Q4, and this provided a boost to Q3 results and supported our reasoning for leaving our adjusted EPS guidance unchanged. In Q4, we expect to see continued growth in our Energy/Renewables segment, a turning point in our Pipeline segment and our typical seasonal decline in Utilities, partially offset by a full quarter contribution from PLH. With the continued strength of our solar business, our expanding communications business and the addition of PLH, we feel very good about our Utilities and Energy/Renewables business underscored by a record backlog. With that, I'll turn it back over to Tom for some closing comments.