Thanks, Bill, and good morning, everyone. I'll take you through our consolidated and segment results starting on Slide 4. Adjusted first quarter sales decreased 8% to $290.8 million. Organic sales decreased 12%, partially offset by the impact of quality alumina products revenue in residential and sales growth in the infrastructure business. The organic decrease related to volume impacts from end market dynamics in the renewable segment, customer rescoping and reprioritizing produce growing projects in the Agtech business and a return to historical seasonal demand patterns and channel inventory correction in the residential business. Backlog at quarter end was $359 million, down approximately 17% versus the first quarter of 2022, but up 20% sequentially as the pace of business began to accelerate in the quarter, specifically in the renewables and infrastructure business. Adjusted operating income and adjusted EBITDA dollars each increased 14% in the first quarter with adjusted EPS up 17%. Margin improvement in the quarter was driven by continued solid execution of renewables, Agtech and infrastructure segments and the residential margins delivering as anticipated. Weighted average shares outstanding decreased 6.1% to 31 million shares in the first quarter, and I'll review our share repurchase program in a moment. Now let's review each segment starting with Slide 5, the Renewable segment. The decrease in sales was impacted by 2 variables. First, the slowing of bookings in the second half of 2022 once the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, or UFLPA, went to effect in June, and the second adverse and late winter weather delaying construction of projects in the regions impacted. However, the pace of activity and bookings strengthened throughout the quarter, with bookings nearly doubling sequentially as customers secured panel from a variety of sources. As a result, backlog also improved and grew 34% sequentially during the quarter. We continue to work with customers who are coming up the UFLPA learning curve and expect year-over-year backlog comparisons to turn positive as we move through the year. As we've stated, our backlog consists of only of signed contracts with deposits. We don't include purchase orders without a signed contract and deposit, MSAs without specific work orders or verbal agreements with customers in our new bookings or backlog. As we expected, we improved segment profitability with adjusted operating and EBITDA margins increasing 920 and 1,020 basis points year-over-year, respectively. Margins were driven by 80/20 initiatives, field operations productivity and improved supply chain management. Margins declined on a sequential basis as overall volume declined 31% and weather -- and the weather our installation crews space was more challenging than in the fourth quarter. We expect sales and margin trends to strengthen throughout the year as customers continue to make more progress with the UFLPA importation, continue to establish additional sources of panel supply, and we continue to enhance and integrate IT operating systems, accelerate best practices and supply chain management and execute in-sourcing initiatives. Let's move to Slide 6 to review our Residential segment. Segment sales were flat with last year. Quality aluminium products contributed 8% growth, and we were able to drive additional participation gains across the business. These 2 contributors offset the decline in organic sales that was driven by the industry headwinds going into the year. The overall channel inventory correction, the markets returned to normal seasonal patterns, market price reductions tied to commodities and a late winter weather surge in key regions of the U.S. End-user demand in the repair remodel markets remain solid and recent customer point-of-sale data reflects positive growth over last year. We also continue to see a number of opportunities to gain participation and expect to have success in 2023, similar to that in the recent years. Adjusted operating and EBITDA margins contracted 230 and 190 basis points, respectively. The quality aluminum product is contributing about half of the decrease. The organic decrease was anticipated as price material costs continue to realign during commodity price deflation and the market returned to its normal seasonal demand pattern with a somewhat slower seasonal start. On a sequential basis, margins expanded 310 and 300 basis points, respectively, as price material cost alignment improved during the first quarter. The integration of quality aluminum products is going well, and we continue to identify additional opportunities to create value. We expect margins to improve throughout the year as volume accelerates during seasonal peaks, price material cost comes into better alignment and the quality aluminum products integration benefits are realized. And we also expect to continue to standardize our systems on a common ERP platform over the course of the year in our residential business, which we expect will drive further efficiencies in the future. Let's move to Slide 7 to review our Agtech segment. Adjusted sales decreased 18% as produce customers resized existing fruit and vegetable projects to prioritize the launch of future growing facilities, driving temporary project start delays. While backlog decreased 31% year-over-year and 3% sequentially, bookings and accordingly backlog are expected to increase in the coming quarters as the active project pipeline is at its highest level in company history, driven by producing cannabis projects. Segment adjusted operating and EBITDA margins increased 440 and 510 basis points, respectively, through stronger business mix, additional improvements in operating systems, which are now fully unified across the business, supply chain productivity and efficiency improvements, and we continue to expect solid margin performance in 2023. Let's move to Slide 8 to review our Infrastructure segment. Segment sales increased 8.7%, driven by strong demand, participation gains and the positive impact of the infrastructure investment in Jobs Act. As we expected, momentum continues with backlog increasing 38% year-over-year as state governments gain access to federal funding and strong demand persists in both fabricated and non-fabricated product lines. We expect continued strength this year from increased infrastructure spending related to the Infrastructure Act and our ongoing efforts to increase market participation. The segment adjusted operating income more than doubled and adjusted operating and EBITDA margin improved 800 and 760 basis points, respectively, driven by volume, strong progress in 80/20 and supply chain initiatives with improved price management. We expect continued strength in profitability through the rest of the year. Now let's move to Slide 9 and discuss our balance sheet and cash flow. At March 31, we had $344 million available on our revolver and cash on hand of $7 million. During the quarter, we generated $38 million in cash from operations through a combination of margin improvement and $8 million generated from reductions in working capital. Accounts payable is beginning to return to more normal levels from the depressed level at year-end related to the timing of our destocking of inventory. As a result, our free cash flow generation during the first quarter was strong and counter seasonal 1.3% of sales. We used the cash generated, along with cash on hand to pay down $39 million on our revolver during the quarter. And at quarter end, we had $52 million outstanding on our revolver for net leverage under 1/4 of a turn. We remain focused on driving continued improvement in our operating cash generation on stronger profitability in 2023 with lower investment in working capital and are targeting free cash flow in excess of 10% of sales for the year. We continue to expect to use generated cash flow to repay outstanding borrowings, fund investments in organic and inorganic growth along with opportunistic stock purchases supplemented as needed by the use of our revolver depending on timing of any M&A or repurchases. And let's move to Slide 10. We'll update you on the share repurchase program. During the quarter, we repurchased approximately 154,000 shares with a market value of $7.4 million at an average price of $47.99, and we funded this repurchase through operating cash flow. From inception of the buyback to the end of the first quarter, we've expended approximately 47% of our $200 million authorization. And at quarter end, we had 30.8 million shares outstanding with a weighted average shares of 31 million shares during the quarter. Now I'll turn the call back to Bill.