Thanks, Jude. We're pleased to report strong Q1 results, including record revenue and an adjusted operating margin of 18.2%, which we expect to be at the top of the industry. Our quarterly results again demonstrate the resiliency and earnings power of our diversified business model, as this is our 7th consecutive quarter of profitability. The staffing-driven constraints we've experienced for over a year now have eased, and we were able to grow our scheduled service business as rapidly as we intended to. Year-over-year unit costs fell for the second consecutive quarter despite significant increases in maintenance and airport-related expenses. It's important to keep in mind that our unique operating model is the opposite of the high utilization carriers. Our diversification across scheduled service, charter and cargo operations leads to resiliency through business cycles. While we've seen large increases in OA capacity in some of our markets, which has pressured yields, there are significant opportunities for accretive growth in our charter and cargo businesses, and we'll continue to allocate capacity to the segments generating the highest returns. Let me turn now to the specifics of the first quarter. First, on revenue and capacity. In the first quarter, total revenue grew 5.9% versus Q1 of last year to $311.5 million. This is our highest quarterly total revenue on record. Scheduled service revenue plus ancillary revenue grew 2.8% to $227.4 million, also the highest on record. Scheduled service TRASM decreased 11.7% to $0.122 as scheduled service ASMs grew by more than 16%. Total fare declined 11.3% to $196.41, while we maintained an 87% load factor. For the month of March, we saw our scheduled service load factor at 89%. First quarter is historically our strongest, and we expect to see a seasonally driven fall in unit revenue from Q1 to Q2, exacerbated by the Easter shift into Q1 and the nearly 20% growth in scheduled service ASMs we're expecting to see in Q2. Charter revenue in the first quarter grew 2.4% to $47.3 million on a block hour decline of 3%, driving charter revenue per block hour up 5.6%. If you exclude changes in fuel reimbursement revenue from both Q1 of this year and Q1 of last year, charter revenue grew 6.5% over the period and revenue per block hour was up 9.8%. Ad hoc charter revenue grew 29% versus Q1 of last year and charter flying under long-term contracts with 75% of total charter revenue versus 80% last year. First quarter cargo revenue grew 2.5% to $23.9 million on a 1.1% decrease in block hours. As a reminder, our cargo rates increase annually at the end of December. Let me turn now to costs. Our first quarter total operating expenses increased 7.5% on a 9.6% increase in total block hours. CASM declined by 5.4% versus Q1 of '23, while adjusted CASM declined by 0.1%, marking our second consecutive quarter of year-over-year CASM declines. As our pilot availability issues have eased, we've been able to grow flying through higher aircraft utilization, which was 8 hours per day in Q1, up 9.6% versus Q1 of last year. Our declining CASM came despite increases in both maintenance expenses and higher airport costs. Maintenance expenses grew by 29% year-over-year, driven by an increase in the number of airframe and engine overhaul events from 3 in Q1 of '23 to 8 this quarter, while the rolling off of COVID relief payments to airports helped to drive a 34.6% increase in rent and landing fees. Now let me turn now to the balance sheet. Our total liquidity at the end of Q1 was $179 million, which incorporates $11.5 million in share repurchases that we made during the quarter and $29.7 million in CapEx spend. At this point, we do not expect to purchase any incremental aircraft until we begin looking for 2026 capacity at the very earliest. We anticipate full year 2024 CapEx to be well below $100 million. We continue to maintain a very strong balance sheet and our net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio at the end of Q1 was 2.5x. Since we do not have a significant debt burden, we have flexibility in how we deploy our cash. Turning now to guidance. We expect second quarter total revenue to be between $255 million and $265 million on block hour growth of 8% to 11%. We're anticipating our cost per gallon for fuel to be $2.93 and for us to achieve an operating margin between 4% and 7%. Our business is built for resiliency and we'll continue to allocate capacity between our lines of business to maximize profitability and minimize earnings volatility. With that, we will open it up for questions.