Thank you, Tim, and good morning, everyone. It's a snowy wintery morning here in Southwest Virginia today. As Tim and Tommy have reviewed, we have had an excellent first quarter. The first quarter started off very warm, in fact, and ended very cold and continued to be cold through the month of January. We'll talk about this in a minute, but we look forward to sharing some exciting volume delivery and other statistics related to January in the second quarter. But, again, looking back on the first quarter, Tommy mentioned our large transportation customer who had incredible volume growth year over year. That customer does have the ability to switch fuels, but it's our understanding that they will continue to use natural gas in the near term, certainly in the second fiscal quarter and third fiscal quarter. Housing growth has been steady and maybe even strong in the region. There continue to be new neighborhoods either breaking ground or moving from planning to construction stage. That's going to continue to allow us to have new main extensions and, of course, ultimately new service connections. We are still working on expanding in Franklin County. We talked about that on the year-end call just a couple of months ago. That hasn't moved really fast due to the winter weather over the last sixty days. Certainly, as we start to come out of winter and into the construction season, we expect to have more progress there, and we'll see that in our capital forecast in just a minute. Speaking of the capital forecast, we are on slide eight. Our total year capital spending remains at $21.6 million just as we announced in December. We may change some of the capital mix, if you will, between the categories as we adjust and the conditions for the end of the fiscal year. But again, we still think we're going to be in the $21.5 to $22 million range for fiscal 2025. Moving on to slide nine, the first quarter, as Tim just provided in great detail, is as we expected, and we're happy about that. There certainly is some economic uncertainty today as we've all been following in the popular press, with the recent change in presidential administration that's causing some of us to pause on a few things and to size up what some of this means economically. Certainly, some of the actions being taken may have an inflationary effect, and then it appears that the Federal Reserve is cautious or certainly has a wait-and-see attitude in its approach right now with regard to interest rates. If you look back or think back over the last two years, we, as a company, have addressed inflationary and cost pressures through back-to-back rate cases, and that's helped us be in a position to hopefully manage some of this potential inflationary pressure in fiscal 2025. Tommy, maybe remind those on the call about the timing of the rate cases and how they impact fiscal 2025.