Thanks, Naren. Today, I'll be covering Q1 performance, including how we're thinking about the COVID-19 impact on future quarters, our strong liquidity position and our flexible balance sheet.Turning to Slide 7. Let's start with the continuing operations financial summary. I'm going to talk about Terminix section in more detail later. So let me first cover European Pest Control and Other operations. Our European Pest operations contributed $18 million of revenue in the period, primarily from Nomor in Sweden and Norway as well as our Terminix U.K. business. The $18 million in revenue contributed approximately $2 million in EBITDA in the quarter as strong margins in Nomor were offset by high back-office costs remaining after the carve-out of Terminix U.K. from its previous owners operating systems. As we look forward into the rest of the year, our European businesses will be impacted by COVID-19. Norway and the U.K. implemented significant shelter-in-place orders. And although Sweden officially remained open, many businesses independently shut down operations.We also recognized the $2 million negative adjustment to our self-insurance reserves for automobile, general liability and workers' compensation reserves in the period. Over the last several quarters, we have seen positive adjustments to our self-insured liabilities, and we continue to make progress in our safety initiatives across the company. We believe we are adequately reserved for future claims.As you'll remember from our call last quarter, our former ServiceMaster brand segment is now reported in discontinued operations as a result of our ongoing strategic review process. As a component of the move to discontinued operations, there are $3 million of costs that were previously allocated to the segment that GAAP accounting requires us to classify within continuing operations. These costs are general allocations for back-office support functions like accounting and finance, human resources and information technology infrastructure. Ultimately, some smaller portion of these costs will become dis-synergies that impact the EBITDA of the remaining business, but it's important to note that we have a focused effort underway to streamline and improve the corporate overhead structure. And as Naren mentioned earlier, we have taken a number of actions after the quarter end to reduce these costs, and those will flow through in future periods.Adjusted net income and adjusted EPS reflect the flow-through of lower EBITDA in the period.Turning to Slide 8. Let's take a deeper dive into organic revenue drivers for Terminix. I thought it'd be helpful to look beyond just quarterly numbers and look deeper into exactly what we saw in March. The chart on the left lays out reported organic growth and how it moved over the months of the quarter. As you can see across the board, we were in line for a strong growth quarter before the impact of COVID-19 in the last 2 weeks of the period. Starting with Residential Pest Control, 4% growth year-to-date through February was offset by a 3% decline in March. Despite improvements in customer retention and Net Promoter Scores, the last 2 weeks of March fell off considerably with work order postponements from customers and a decline in new unit sales. In April, we have seen a stabilization of work order postponements, albeit at a much higher level than normal, and have an ongoing effort around rescheduling these canceled services quickly in order to recapture some of the missed revenue as customers get more comfortable with the safety of our primarily exterior services. We expect to see continued softness in new unit sales, and it is important to note that we are going to delay our door-to-door summer sales program until it is safe for our associates and customers. With that said, we believe that Residential Pest Control will be our least impacted service line through the COVID-19 crisis.Commercial Pest Control had a very strong quarter, posting 3% total growth. After an extremely strong January and February, with year-to-date organic growth of 5%, the business was impacted by service postponements from closed customer sites in late March. This segment continues to see strong pricing opportunities throughout the quarter as we price our offerings in line with our improved service levels. Not surprisingly, the impact to Commercial Pest is being felt differently in certain business verticals and geographies. The customer postponements I mentioned earlier are primarily coming in retail, restaurant, in hospitality verticals, which combined make up less than 20% of our revenue in this channel. Our verticals such as property management, food processing, health care and transportation, while certainly impacted, have been more resilient. We've also seen that the impact has been greater in higher virus risk areas such as New York City, where our Assured brand has seen considerable work order postponements.As Naren mentioned, we are starting to see traction with nationwide rollout of disinfection services, which we are offering in a new back-to-work bundle with pest control for customers that previously had postponed services and are now reopening sites. Towards the back half of April, we saw an increase in the number of customers calling us to reschedule work in preparation for reopening. Overall, we expect Commercial Pest Control to be more heavily impacted from the virus in the near term, but believe we have strong momentum and adjacent revenue opportunities that will help us bounce back and emerge even stronger once we are past the crisis.In Termite & Home Services, January and February results were in line with our expectations. However, we saw a meaningful decline in March. Retention for the business line drove strong renewal revenue growth, the new unit sales require access to the home for a full inspection and have slowed in the current environment. Termite & Home Services is made up of approximately 50% renewal revenue, 25% core termite sales and 25% home services sales in any given quarter. We expect retention to remain strong on renewals in the channel as customers maintain protection on their most valuable asset.Preventative termite sales, usually part of the cross-selling opportunity with pest control, will be challenged as curative termite sales will largely depend on the strength of the termite season that is currently ramping up. We expect home services sales, particularly attic insulation to be most impacted in this channel as these are typically larger dollar jobs that require significant time in the home that customers may postpone in the current environment.Beyond our main service lines, we're also a distributor of chemicals and supplies, which helps us improve our volume leverage with our major suppliers of pest control chemicals. The first quarter saw a 7% organic decline in this business as we dealt with delivery delays in supply channels. While demand for chemicals is difficult to forecast for the coming months, we have seen improvement in supply chain availability since March.Before we turn to the Terminix EBITDA bridge, I'd like to touch on our divested fumigation channel that was down $3 million in Q1. During the first quarter, we saw significant declines to this revenue as the service requires customers to vacate their home for a period of time as treatment occurs. We expect to see continued weakness in the sale of these units due to impacts of the virus in the near term. We continue to pursue alternates, less invasive options to treat dry wood termites, like our Drywood Defend product for preventative solutions, and heat and other treatment methods for curative solutions.Moving on to Slide 9. You can see EBITDA drivers for the quarter. Organic revenue growth of $5 million contributed $2 million of adjusted EBITDA. A as we mentioned previously, revenue was impacted in the last 2 weeks of March from customer work order cancellations in both our residential and commercial pest lines of the business.Acquisition revenue of $17 million contributed over $1 million in the quarter. $3 million of the revenue was from lower-margin product sales revenue with $10 million from the virus impacted commercial pest line. We remain focused on our integration plans that will phase in over the course of the year and increase the EBITDA conversion rates we saw this quarter.Termite damage claims increased $6 million year-over-year for a total expense of $14 million in the period. The expense is primarily driven from activity in the Mobile Bay Area and is in line with our previous guidance on termite damage claims. We remain on track for full year termite damage claim and mitigation expense of $70 million. As Naren mentioned, mitigation efforts remain on track, and we're making good progress on our supplemental treatment plans in the Mobile Bay area.Expenses for the mitigation program were less than $1 million in the period, but will ramp up throughout the rest of the year now that we are approaching full staffing. To date, we have experienced little impact to our mitigation efforts from COVID-19 and remain on track to complete the program over the course of 2020.Production labor increased $3 million, primarily related to labor inefficiencies from the rapid decline of work orders in the last few weeks of March. As Naren mentioned earlier, we have taken action in the second quarter to rightsize our frontline.Chemicals and materials increased $4 million in the period, partially driven by an increase in cost for PPE for our employees. Although we expect to see less impact in this area for the rest of the year, we do expect slightly higher material cost to continue for the foreseeable future as we take the appropriate steps to protect our people and customers and purchase additional materials to support our new disinfection service offering in Terminix Commercial.Fumigation subcontracting expense increased $2 million in the quarter. We've now fully lapped the fumigation outsourcing that will stabilize the year-over-year margins. But as I mentioned earlier, we continue to see declines in fumigation revenue due to the impact of COVID-19, especially in California, our biggest fume market, which has implemented significant shelter-in-place guidelines.In all, we estimate the virus impact on our profitability by between $5 million and $6 million during the quarter in Terminix, including the revenue flow-through from lower work orders late in March, increased cost of personal protective equipment and increased sick leave and labor inefficiencies in the period. Naren mentioned that approximately $45 million of cost actions earlier will help us support our margins as we look to the rest of the year.Moving to Slide 10. I'd like to touch on the performance of ServiceMaster Brands in the quarter. ServiceMaster Brands reported year-over-year revenue growth of 3%. Revenue increases in commercial cleaning national accounts and owned branch operations more than offset a reduction in royalty revenue in the period. Royalty revenue was negatively impacted by the mild winter and significantly less area-wide events than prior year and Merry Maids franchisee closures. Primarily due to this revenue mix shift, EBITDA declined $2 million year-over-year to $23 million.Let's take a deeper look at the impacts from the current pandemic on each of our major revenue lines within ServiceMaster brands. Disaster restoration through the ServiceMaster Restore brand represents approximately half of the revenue of the segment. Revenue in this channel is largely driven by kitchen fires, burst pipes and to a lesser extent, area-wide events. As I mentioned earlier, we did see a reduction in restoration work in Q1, but this was mainly due to a drop in area-wide events in the mild winter. Looking forward, ServiceMaster Restore will see revenue from disinfection projects, which closely aligned to mold remediation work already performed in the business. This will help to offset the impact of the soft revenue in Q1 and impacts from COVID-19 in future quarters.Commercial cleaning and national accounts, primarily through the ServiceMaster Clean brand represent between 30% and 40% of the revenue in the segment. Revenue has been negatively impacted by closed offices and service postponements in a similar manner to Terminix Commercial. However, ServiceMaster Brands was able to rapidly mobilize an existing disinfection offering, and they have seen a nice pickup in onetime jobs for commercial clients that is helping to offset COVID-related recurring revenue declines.Residential cleaning through the Merry Maids brand represents approximately 10% of the revenue in the segment. It has been the most impacted of all of our brands. Residential cleaning is the only line of the business that has not been deemed essential in all parts of the country and as a result, has experienced many shutdowns in operations due to stay-at-home orders and customer discomfort on having service providers in the home. We are starting to see a number of these locations reopen where these orders have been lifted, and the franchise owners are mobilized and ready for what will likely be increased demand for disinfection services at homes as people get back to work and schools in the coming months.Moving to Slide 11. I thought it would be helpful to walk through how we think about our cash flow dynamics given the current focus on liquidity in the markets. We have extremely strong free cash flow conversion rates in this business. I'll walk down some of the higher impact line items that contribute to free cash flow in the chart on the left side of the page. We expect working capital usage to be roughly flat for the full year as the government stimulus plan allows us to defer payroll taxes that should more than offset any delays in customer collections.On the CapEx line, we used $10 million in the first quarter and are taking actions to limit discretionary spend, specifically in leasehold improvements in our facilities. Our cash interest is largely fixed and expected to be approximately $85 million for the full year. Cash taxes are expected to be between 12% and 14% for the full year and will benefit in the second quarter from a penalty free delay as part of the recently passed CARES Act.Turning to uses of cash. We spent $26 million in the first quarter on several small tuck-in acquisitions. We continue to have deals in the pipeline and given our strong free cash flow dynamics, we expect to continue our tuck-in program and opportunities rise. We have scheduled debt payments primarily related to leased vehicles in previous acquisitions that are expected to be slightly over $70 million for the full year. We also completed our share repurchase program in the first quarter with the purchase of over 3.7 million shares at $27.64 per share. We have no immediate plans to seek additional authorization as we look to conserve cash and liquidity given the current uncertainty.Cash generation remains a strong characteristic of our business and although only representing 1 month of the second quarter, collections have remained strong so far in April, and our cash balances increased approximately $40 million in the month.On Slide 12, you can see our cash, debt and leverage ratios as of the end of the quarter. As you will remember, we refinanced our Term Loan B in November of last year, extending the maturity by 3 years to 2026, upsizing our revolver capacity and improving our interest rates by 75 basis points. We remain in an extremely strong position with immediate access to $370 million in cash from our revolving credit agreement at an attractive rate of LIBOR plus 175. The term loan is the covenant-lite instrument and as such has no maintenance covenants until more than $120 million in cash is drawn from the revolving credit facility. In the unlikely event the company draws more than $120 million from the facility, the applicable covenant would be 4x adjusted EBITDA as defined in the credit agreement to net first lien debt only. When including EBITDA from discontinued operations, that ratio is currently 1.3x. This leaves us ample capacity for both cash usage and the ability to absorb any EBITDA declines over the coming quarters.While the impact of the virus will be felt in many aspects of our business, we believe we remain well positioned operationally and from a liquidity and balance sheet perspective to whether those impacts. We are taking aggressive actions as we manage through the pandemic and will emerge from it in an even stronger position.Before I turn it over to Naren, I also wanted to briefly touch on the decision to withdraw our full year guidance. Given the evolving and unprecedented health and economic impacts of COVID-19 on our customers and the economy at large, it's difficult for us to accurately estimate the ultimate scale of the impact and the timing of the subsequent recovery. We'll continue to monitor the landscape and the pandemic's impact on the predictability of our earnings, and we'll reevaluate this decision when or if the impacts normalize in the coming months and quarters.And with that, I'll now turn it back over to Naren for closing comments. Naren?