Thank you, Blake. Good morning, and thank you for joining us today to discuss our fourth quarter and full-year 2022 results and our business outlook for 2023. Primoris achieved a record year in 2022, with revenue, backlog and net income all achieving new highs at year-end. We grew our revenue to $4.4 billion, up more than 26% from 2021, with 15% being organic. The growth was driven by our Energy Renewables segment, which was up 48%, primarily driven by the utility scale solar market, and our Utilities segment, which was up 22% from the previous year, driven by the expansion of our communication services, as well as the acquisition of PLH. Net income was up 15% from 2021 to $133 million and our GAAP EPS increased to $2.47 per fully diluted share marking the sixth consecutive year of EPS growth. We entered 2022 with just over $4 billion in backlog that served as the foundation for our revenue growth during the year. Now, as we begin 2023, we have expanded our backlog to $5.5 billion, an increase of over 36%, which puts us on the right track to continue our growth trajectory. These and other successes were achieved despite facing numerous challenges to our business in 2022. We faced economic uncertainty from the escalating war in Ukraine, lingering impact in Asia from the global pandemic, fuel and wage escalation and supply chain constraints, all of which we were able to overcome to deliver profitable growth. Now, let's look at the three segments in detail. In our Utilities segment, we face significant challenges from fuel and labor escalation, particularly in the first half of the year. However, we responded quickly by negotiating with clients to recoup added costs and finish the second half of the year with improved margins. We are continuing to renegotiate our MSAs in 2023 with other customers and believe that we will see continued margin improvement in the segment as the year progresses. We were also able to build on our communications and power delivery service offerings with the acquisitions of B Comm and PLH. B Comm was a smaller strategic acquisition that supplemented our communications services with new customers in the rapidly growing Central Texas region. Since closing on PLH in August of 2022, we have been busy integrating them into our operations and we are on track with our plan. In part due to PLH being a cultural fit for Primoris, we have been successful in retaining their top talent. These employees will help to maintain key relationships and preserve the safe, reliable operations that complemented the other strategic attributes of the deal. As of today, we have made good progress integrating the various PLH entities across our Utilities, Energy Renewables, and Pipeline segments. This includes a significant portion to human resources, safety, fleet, finance, and marketing functions, particularly into our power delivery and gas utilities businesses. Some parts of the integration process such as information technology and certain union operations will continue to be worked through in the coming quarters. But from a customer-facing and project standpoint, PLH will seamlessly operate alongside the rest of Primoris by the end of Q1, and we will begin to realize estimated annualized synergies of over $10 million at the beginning of Q2. We are excited to have the PLH team on Board and value their contributions toward meeting the goals of our organization. Power delivery and communications will remain two areas we plan to continue to build our size and scope. We have made some big entries into these markets the past several years with PLH and Future. We've remained confident that these markets are well-positioned to benefit from multi-year tailwinds and billions of dollars invested across all the markets we serve. Through a combination of acquisitions and continuous operational improvement, as well as through education and training, we expect to further our reputation as one of the top specialty contractors in North America. Looking at the Pipeline Services segment, while we expected to see a decline in 2022, following strong years in 2020 and 2021, the industry-wide headwinds, including fewer large projects sanctioned and permitted led to results falling below the expectations we had at the onset of the year. However, we secured a large pipeline project in third quarter valued at more than $120 million to help set us on a course back to profitability going into 2023. With a combination of disciplined execution and a more constructive outlook for the Texas and Louisiana shell markets, we are optimistic that we are beginning to emerge from the trough in this business. The Energy Renewables segment had another breakout year in 2022, achieving 41% organic revenue growth and 12% gross margins. This was driven by the rapid expansion of both our solar EPC business as well as the industrial business, which implemented key performance improvement initiatives to boost margins. Expanding on utility scale solar EPC, we were able to achieve 85% top-line growth in 2022, despite being partially impacted by supply chain issues related to module delivery. While some of our customers experienced module delays, the business demonstrated the capability to adapt and overcome the slowdowns to beat their business plan. We have roughly $1.3 billion in backlog to start 2023, and current indications from our customers are that issues with the supply of modules are expected to alleviate in the back half of the year. There is progress being made on the importation of solar modules with a proper chain of custody documentation to allow them entering into the United States. Additionally, many of our customers have already secured domestic supply or are investing in domestic manufacturing of modules to ensure their projects are able to move forward as well as to take advantage in the coming years of the Inflation Reduction Act legislation recently signed into law. In fact, we currently have over $1 billion of projects in the award or contracting stage, and a number of bids on projects valued at over $3.6 billion. We expect that a significant number of these projects will be added to our backlog in the coming years, which will further extend our backlog of projects as far out as 2026. These are encouraging signs that we believe will continue to drive more opportunities in large and small utility scale solar projects. To this end, we are growing several more large utility scale project teams and small scale teams in 2023 to meet this growing demand. Through organic growth and acquisitions, we continue to take significant steps to reposition Primoris for long-term success in higher growth, higher margin end markets across our segments. These markets are poised to benefit from the multi-year private and public sector investment required to meet the growing infrastructure needs in the areas we serve. Primoris is a different company than it was five years ago, and we are confident that we are moving in the right direction. We have transitioned from a big project industrial heavy civil and pipeline company to one with a greater emphasis on specialty contracting for less risky, smaller projects and MSA contracts with less lumpiness in revenue and earnings. Given the shift in our business mix towards electric grid transformation, renewables and expanding communications access, we made the decision to merge our Pipeline Services segment into our Energy Renewables segment to form our new Energy segment effective January 1, 2023. Going forward, the two Primoris segments, Utilities and Energy will each represent approximately half of our total revenue. These segments will better reflect the scope of our operations and the markets we serve. Primoris has never been better positioned to meet the demands of North America's growing and ever-changing needs in energy transformation, generation and delivery. Now, I'll hand it over to Ken for more on our financial results.