Thanks, Tom, and good morning, everyone. Our Q1 revenue was $1.4 billion, an increase of $156 million or 12.4% from the prior year, primarily driven by strong growth in our Energy segment. The Energy segment was up over $245 million or 33.4% from the prior year, driven by strong growth in solar and industrial construction as well as some work that was pulled forward from Q2 and Q3. The Utilities segment was down a little over $48 million from the prior year due to a decrease in project work and a slightly slower start to the year in communications, partially offset by increased MSA revenue. The majority of the decline in project work was due to the completion of a large substation project during 2023. We expect to see some choppiness in project revenue on a quarterly basis as we continue to grow toward our preferred mix of project work in the segment. I also want to point out that we made a change in how we report segment revenue. Historically, we've reported segment revenue net of the intersegment eliminations since it wasn't material to our total revenue. However, starting this quarter, we are showing gross revenue for each segment and then separately showing the intersegment revenue deduction. We believe this more accurately reports the gross revenue and revenue growth of each segment and better illustrates the growing benefit of cross-selling services between our segments. An example of this is our power delivery group building substations and transmission lines for our renewable customers. Gross profit for the quarter was approximately $133 million, an increase of $34 million from the prior year, primarily due to higher revenue and improved revenue mix. Gross margins were 9.4% for the quarter compared to 7.9% in the prior year. Looking further at our segments. In the Utilities segment, gross profit was $29.5 million, down $4.1 million compared to the prior year. This was driven by the lower amount of project work and the slower start in communications work compared to the prior year. Gross margins of 6% were slightly below the 6.2% in the prior year, primarily driven by the lower project work but still in the middle of our expected range of 5% to 7%. We expect to see margins move into our 9% to 11% range for the remaining quarters of the year. In the Energy segment, gross profit was $103.9 million for the quarter, a $37.7 million increase from the prior year due to both higher revenue and improved margins. Gross margins were 10.5%, up from 8.9% in the prior year. The higher gross margins were a result of an improved mix from renewables work and improved margins in our industrial businesses in Canada and in the western U.S. Turning to SG&A. Expenses in the first quarter were $88.6 million, an increase of $10.6 million compared to the prior year but in line with our expectations. The increase in SG&A is primarily due to increased personnel costs to support our growth. As a percent of revenue, SG&A was essentially flat to the prior year, and we expect SG&A for the full year to remain in the low 6% range. Net interest expense in the first quarter was $18 million, down around $0.5 million from the prior year. The decrease was a result of lower average debt balances, partially offset by higher average interest rates. Our effective tax rate was 29% for the quarter, and we believe this rate will be consistent for the full year, depending on the states in which we work and nondeductible components of per diem expenses. Earnings for the quarter saw a significant improvement from the prior year. EPS increased by $0.33 per share, and adjusted EPS was $0.29 per share higher. Additionally, net income increased to just under $19 million, an increase of almost $18 million from the prior year. And adjusted EBITDA increased to $73.8 million, up $20.9 million or 40% from the prior year. Taking a look at cash flow for Q1, we saw our cash used in operations of $28.5 million. This was an improvement of around $87 million from the prior year. The primary drivers were an increase in deferred revenue related to upfront payments for future projects and higher operating income. Looking at the balance sheet. We maintained strong liquidity of $451 million, which includes $178 million of cash and $273 million in available borrowing capacity on our revolver. And our trailing 12-month net debt-to-EBITDA ratio held steady at 2x at the end of the quarter. We could still see our ratio tick up into Q2 and Q3 based on seasonal working capital needs but then trend back down as we near the end of the year. Transitioning to backlog. We ended the quarter with $10.6 billion in total backlog compared to $10.9 billion at the end of 2023. Fixed backlog decreased $359 million during Q1, primarily due to the timing of booking new solar and industrial projects following a strong fourth quarter of new awards. We typically see variability in new awards from quarter-to-quarter, and we expect to resume backlog growth in the coming quarters. MSA backlog was up $86 million from year-end, driven by $182 million of backlog growth in Utilities. And now turning to our guidance. We are maintaining our full year EPS guidance of $2.50 to $2.70 per share, adjusted EPS guidance of $3.05 to $3.25 per share, and adjusted EBITDA guidance of $395 million to $415 million for the full year 2024. The strong start to the year gives us increased confidence that the higher end of our guidance range is achievable if we continue to see positive momentum across our end markets. We will further assess our guidance as 2024 unfolds and we learn more about the specific timing and scope of new awards. With that, I'll turn it back over to Tom.