Thanks, Tom, and good morning, everyone. Our Q2 revenue was just under $1.6 billion, an increase of $150.3 million or 10.6% from the prior year, driven primarily by strong growth in our Energy segment. Energy segment was up $194.8 million or 25% from the prior year, driven primarily by solar and industrial construction. The Utility segment was down $28.4 million or 4.4% from the prior year, primarily due to a decrease in gas operations activity and a major substation project that was completed in the prior year. These impacts were partially offset by increased transmission and substation work for our renewables customers and increased activity in communications. Gross profit for the second quarter was $186.7 million, an increase of $29.4 million or 18.7% compared to the prior year. This is primarily due to the increase in Energy segment revenue and improved margins in both segments. As a result, gross margins were 11.9% for the quarter compared to 11.1% in the prior year. Turning to our segment results. Utility segment gross profit was $64.1 million, down $2.4 million or 3.7% compared to the prior year due to the decrease in revenue. Despite lower revenue, gross margins improved slightly to 10.3% compared to 10.2% in the prior year due to improved operational productivity and cost management. We continue to prioritize improving margins in this segment through a combination of favorable project work, MSA rate increases and higher productivity in our power delivery business. We expect to see some improvement for the full year 2024 compared to the prior year and further margin expansion in the years ahead as we progress toward our goal to have this segment perform in the 10% to 12% range. However, for 2024, we still anticipate margins will be at the lower end of the 9% to 11% range. In the Energy segment, gross profit was $122.6 million for the quarter, a $31.9 million or 35.1% increase from the prior year due to both higher revenue and improved margins. Gross margins were 12.6%, up from 11.7% in the prior year. The improved margins were driven by strong execution on natural gas power plant projects in the Western U.S. and an increase in renewables revenue. Looking at SG&A. Expenses in the second quarter were $100.1 million, an increase of $14.5 million compared to the prior year. The increase in SG&A is primarily due to increased personnel costs and technology investments to support our growth. As a percentage of revenue, SG&A was up slightly from the prior year to 6.4% of revenue due to the timing of certain expenses. But we expect SG&A will be down slightly in the third and fourth quarters as we trend towards the low 6% range for the full year. Net interest expense in the quarter was $17.1 million, up slightly from the prior year due to a $3.2 million unrealized gain on an interest rate swap in the prior year, mostly offset by lower average debt balances this year. Given that we've been able to fund our operations for the first half of the year without the need to draw on our revolver, we now anticipate that our full year interest expense will be between $71 million and $74 million. This is down from our previous estimate of $77 million to $82 million. Our effective tax rate was 29% for the quarter. We believe this rate will be consistent for the full year. Second quarter earnings showed solid improvement from the prior year. EPS increased by $0.19 per share and adjusted EPS was higher by $0.24 per share. Additionally, net income increased almost $11 million to just under $50 million and adjusted EBITDA increased to $117 million, up approximately $15 million or 14% compared to the prior year. Taking a look at cash flow. In Q2, we saw cash flow from operations of $16 million, which drove a small $12.4 million cash use year-to-date. This is a strong improvement over the almost $81 million of cash used through the first 2 quarters in the prior year. The primary drivers were an increase in deferred revenue related to upfront customer payments and higher operating income. Cash flow is a key focus for our leadership team, and we believe we are on track to see improvements in our working capital through the initiatives we are implementing. Moving over to the balance sheet. We maintained strong liquidity of $480 million, which includes $207 million of cash and $273 million in available borrowing capacity on our revolver. Our trailing 12-month net debt-to-EBITDA ratio, as defined by our debt covenants, dropped to 1.8x EBITDA at the end of Q2. This represents our lowest leverage ratio since the second quarter of 2022 just prior to the PLH acquisition. While our ratio can differ somewhat quarter-to-quarter based on working capital needs, we are trending towards our target ratio of 1.5x EBITDA. Our capital allocation priority continues to be paying down debt with free cash flow in the current interest rate environment. Total backlog at the end of Q2 was just under $10.5 billion, down around $440 million from the end of 2023. Fixed backlog was lower by $332 million from year-end, primarily due to the timing of solar and other energy segment bookings. As Tom mentioned, we closed another $500 million right after the end of the quarter, which tops us back up to where we started the year. MSA backlog was lower by about $109 million from year-end, driven by lower MSA work in Canada and lower pipeline MSA work. partially offset by almost $80 million in additional MSA backlog in utilities. We continue to see a lot of opportunity to win work across our end markets, and we are optimistic that we will build backlog in the second half of the year. Barring any unforeseen project delays or push-outs, we believe we can position ourselves to end 2024 with a higher backlog than we started the year. Before turning it back over to Tom, I'll close the financial overview with our updated guidance. We are raising our full year EPS guidance to $2.70 to $2.90 per share, adjusted EPS guidance to $3.25 to $3.45 per share and adjusted EBITDA guidance to $400 million to $420 million for the full year 2024. We are encouraged by our first half results and our outlook for the rest of the year, particularly in solar and industrial construction, along with lower interest expense. With continued safe and successful execution, we believe we are on the path to another record year of revenue and earnings in 2024. With that, I'll turn it back over to Tom.