Thanks, bill, and good morning, everyone. I’ll take you through our consolidated and segment results, starting on Slide 5. Adjusted net sales were flat at $364 million, with organic growth in residential and infrastructure and the acquisition of Quality Aluminum Products, offsetting slower sales in the renewables and AgTech segments. Overall, sales were in line with expectations going into the quarter and our first half sales results are also consistent with full year sales plan. Backlog at quarter end was $412 million, up 1% versus the second quarter of 2022 and up 15% sequentially as the pace of business accelerated through the first half of the year as expected. Adjusted operating income and adjusted EBITDA dollars each increased 18% second quarter with adjusted EPS up 23%. Margin improvement in the quarter was driven by strong execution, price cost alignment in all segments, solid field operations, implementation of additional 80/20 initiatives, along with favorable business and product mix. Weighted average shares outstanding decreased 6% for the second quarter of 2022 to 30.7 million shares in the second quarter of 2022. I’ll review our share repurchase program in a moment. Now let’s read each segment starting with Slide 6, the Renewable segment. The decline in sales was driven by schedule changes, which impacted the timing of revenue recognition of active projects during the quarter. Scheduled changes were mainly related to module supply and local permitting delays. The permitting process is expected to improve as local government offices ramp capacity to meet increasing demand. The pace of new order and contracting activity continued to accelerate and new bookings more than doubled in the quarter. As a result, backlog increased 17% sequentially and is up 6% year-over-year. As a reminder, our backlog consists only as signed contracts with deposits. We do not include purchase orders without a signed contract and deposit, MSAs without specific work orders or global agreements with customers in our new bookings or backlog. Segment profitability improved with adjusted operating and EBITDA margins of 11.7% and 14.8%, respectively, increasing 470 and 550 basis points versus prior year. Team executed well across the business, improving supply chain, material cost reduction, field operations and price cost alignment. Sequential margin improved 790 and 700 basis points, respectively. We expect to deliver improved sales and margin performance in the second half of the year, assuming modules supply improved further and permitting process capacity continues to accelerate. Let’s move to Slide 7 to review our Residential segment. Segment sales increased 14% versus prior year with organic contributing over 1% and the acquisition of Quality Aluminum Products providing the remainder. Organic growth was driven by participation gains across the business and contributions for new customers, which more than offset the impact of prior quarter’s market price adjustments in response to decreasing commodity prices and some remaining channel inventory right size. Quality aluminum products performance delivered to our expectations. The residential end markets having returned to normal seasonality are building expected volumes in the second and third quarters. Channel inventory destocking appears to be complete and demand remains solid in our end markets. We continue to see opportunity to successfully gain additional market participation in 2023 as we have in recent years. Adjusted operating EBITDA margins of 19.3% and 20.5%, respectively, expanded 80 and 90 basis points as volume improved from last year, price cost was better aligned, we implemented additional 80/20 initiatives and product line mix is favorable. We expect these items to drive continued strength in segment margins during the second half of the year. QAPs market performance was in line with expectations and continues to improve profitability towards Gibraltar levels as the integration proceeds. And additionally, after quarter end, we completed the acquisition of a small $8.5 million revenue Utah based building accessories, manufacturing distributor for $10.4 million, a little less than 6x 2022 EBITDA. And this business will improve our market coverage and service levels in the North or West region, reduced logistics costs supporting the region and utilize an asset-light operating model, which we may also deploy to drive participation in other adjacent markets. We also continue to invest in and implement the common ERP system for the Residential segment. Common system will provide operating efficiency, speed and agility and scalability for more profitable growth. Let’s move to Slide 8 to review our AgTech segment. Adjusted net sales decreased 16.1% as the commercial business experience and customer delays and project starts. New orders in the Produce business helped increase backlog 16.2% sequentially, which is expected to drive improving sales in the second half of 2023. The project pipeline and [clothing] activity in this business remains robust. Segment adjusted operating EBITDA margin of 9.5% and 12.9%, respectively, an improvement of 280 and 350 basis points were driven by 80/20 actions, supply chain optimization initiatives and improvements in project management systems. We continue to expect margins to strengthen as volume improve . The exit of the processing equipment business resulted in a GAAP operating loss in the segment during the quarter and liquidation is essentially complete with only nominal costs remaining. Let’s move to Slide 9 is our Infrastructure segment. Segment sales increased 12.6% driven by strong demand, participation gains and the positive impact of the infrastructure investment and [Jobs Act]. Momentum on orders continues with backlog increasing 46% year-over-year with state departments of transportation access federal funding and strong demand persists in both fabricated and nonfabricated product lines. This business performed very well during the first half of the year, and we expect continued strength for the remainder of the year. Second, adjusted operating income doubled and adjusted operating and EBITDA margins of 24.1% and 27.6%, respectively, improved 1,070 and 1,030 basis points driven by execution, 80/20 productivity, supply chain efficiency and product line mix. This team is executing very well, and we expect continued strength and profitability for the remainder of the year. Let’s move to Slide 10 to discuss our balance sheet and cash flow. At June 30, we had $384 million available on our revolver and cash on hand of $19 million. During the quarter, we generated $76 million in cash from operations through a combination of margin improvement and $33 million generated from reductions in working capital. We collected cash from inventory reductions and benefited from increases in accounts payable as purchase activity normalize and other liabilities as project-related deposits and billings accelerated with accounts receivable rising on increased sales. As a result, our free cash flow generation during the second quarter was an exceptionally strong 20% of sales. Free cash flow in the first half of the year benefited from an approximately $40 million reduction in our investment in working capital. While we expect continued contribution of cash flow from margin expansion, the impact of working capital improvements is not expected to be significant in the second half of the year. We used cash generated, along with cash on hand to pay down $40 million on our revolver during the quarter. At quarter end, we had $12 million outstanding on our revolver and net leverage is $0. As I mentioned earlier, at the beginning of July, we invested approximately $10 million in Utah-based building accessories business. Given our results to date, we’re confident we can drive continued strength in our operating cash generation on stronger profitability in 2023 with careful working capital management and continue to target 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 our opportunistic stock repurchases, supplemented is needed by use of our revolver depending on the timing of any M&A or repurchases. Let’s move to Slide 11 to update you on our share repurchase program. During the second quarter, we repurchased approximately 368,000 shares with a market value of $17.8 million or an average price of $48.40. We funded this repurchase through operating cash flow. From the inception of the buyback to the end of the second quarter, we expended approximately 56% of our $200 million authorization. At quarter end, we had 30.4 million shares outstanding with the weighted average shares outstanding of $30.7 million during the second quarter. I’ll turn the call back to Bill.