Thank you, Rob. I'll now walk through the financial highlights from the quarter, starting with Medical. Medical segment revenue rose 11.5% year-over-year in the first quarter to $38.3 million, and rose 6.4% sequentially versus Q1 2024. As discussed on prior calls, we provided temporary support to a large hospital customer last year, which generated $2.2 million of revenue in Q2 2023. Excluding the impact of this temporary customer, Medical revenue would have increased 19% year-overyear. Medical continued to see improvement in profitability as segment adjusted EBITDA rose 82.7% year-over-year to $5.5 million in Q2 2024. Medical flight margin increased 700 basis points year-over-year to 23.6% versus 16.6% in the year ago period and increased 130 basis points sequentially versus 22.3% in Q1 2024. This margin expansion was driven primarily by our aircraft acquisitions, growth in our Ground Logistics business and an increase in average revenue per trip. Our Medical customer value proposition has never been stronger and we are committed to further enhancing our offering by investing in our owned and dedicated aircraft fleet, expanding our Ground Logistics business and scaling our organ placement service offering. Now that we have several months of ownership under our belt, we've updated our aircraft profitability and return models with real-world data and we're very happy with the performance we're seeing. The results provide strong support for increased aircraft ownership in areas of high Medical customer density. Compared with non-dedicated third-party aircraft, we are targeting a 10 to 20 percentage point flight profit margin increase, meaning that 10 to 20 additional percentage points of revenue will drop down to the bottom line, net of depreciation, when utilizing our owned aircraft. This represents a 30% plus return on invested capital and an average payback period of approximately three years. Note that this analysis only considers the incremental profit relative to nondedicated thirty-party aircraft. The profitability and return profile would be substantially higher if one were to consider 100% of the profit generated by customers using the aircraft. We also analyzed the return on investment in ground vehicles. We currently operate a fleet of over 30 ground vehicles across eight hubs and we're seeing a payback period of less than one year, creating a great opportunity for continued investment in this area with excellent returns. In summary, the aircraft and vehicle investments we're making in our Medical segment represent an attractive risk adjusted return profile, and future investments in these areas are high on our capital allocation priority list. Looking at the transplant industry broadly, fundamentals remain strong with United States heart, liver and lung organ transplant volume growth persisting in the high-single-digit range during Q2 2024. In short, we're very happy with the growth in the industry and our positioning within it. We're honored to play our small role in helping more Americans than ever receive the organs that they need. Turning to our Passenger business. Short Distance revenue increased 9% year-over-year driven primarily by approximately 20% growth in Airport and mid-teens growth in Europe. In Jet and Other, revenues increased 17.4% year-over-year driven primarily by strength in Jet Charter and other non-flight revenue, partially offset by our discontinuation of the BladeOne seasonal jet service. Our focus on profitability improvements in Passenger continues to bear fruit with flight Profit margin expanding more than 700 basis points year-over-year and segment adjusted EBITDA improving $2.9 million year-over-year to positive $0.8 million. The profitability improvement in passenger was driven by several factors including pricing and efficiencies in our New York Airport transfer product, growth in Europe and improvements in Jet Charter. As Rob mentioned earlier, we made the decision to exit the Canadian market, which had been consistently unprofitable for us. We expect to finalize our exit as early as this month, but have already completed a restructuring that will ensure we do not incur additional losses this year. Given this decision, we are writing off the remaining intangible assets held on the balance sheet related to Canada of $5.8 million. Finally, we've continued our focus on controlling overhead costs with adjusted unallocated corporate expenses shrinking about a percentage point year-over-year this quarter. On the cash flow front, the difference between our adjusted EBITDA of $1 million and cash from operations of $8.4 million in the quarter was primarily driven by the structure of our aircraft purchases, which were all acquired from owners and operators with whom we had pre-existing capacity purchase agreements. As a part of those capacity purchase agreements, we made deposits, $9.3 million of which we applied towards the purchase of seven aircraft in the quarter. The deposits have been booked in prepaid expenses, thus they were a source of cash in Q2 as we unwound the preexisting agreements and purchased seven of the aircraft outright. Excluding aircraft acquisitions in Q2 2024, cash from operations would have been a use of less than $1 million with the delta versus adjusted EBITDA being driven primarily by working capital related to Medical growth. Our capital expenditures which, inclusive of capitalized software development costs, were $16.9 million in the quarter were driven primarily by $14.6 million in total payments towards the first seven aircraft acquisitions. $9.3 million applied from our deposits, a $5.5 million cash payment and a small non-cash adjustment. We ended the quarter with no debt and $142 million of cash and short-term investments, providing flexibility for strategic investments in aircraft, acquisitions in Medical and opportunistic share repurchases. Looking ahead into the balance of the year, Q3 is off to a great start with solid growth in our seasonal Short Distance businesses while Medical remains strong. As such, we are reiterating our 2024 and 2025 financial guidance and we believe our first half 2024 results put us on very solid footing to achieve these targets. In Medical, our first half 2024 results both in terms of revenue and segment adjusted EBITDA came in above our expectations with sequential revenue growth averaging over 9% in the first two quarters of the year. Most of the beat was driven by volumes that were well above the norm at the majority of our contracted transplant centers. In our experience, transplant volumes tend to be lumpy and periods of above average volumes often mean that our hospital customers need to rebuild their organ transplant recipient pipelines. Given this very strong performance in the first half of the year, we expect Medical revenue and adjusted EBITDA to be flattish in Q3 relative to Q2, before resuming low single-digit sequential revenue growth. In terms of year-over-year growth expectations, Medical revenue grew 22% year-over-year in the first half of the year and we expect similar revenue growth in the second half of the year. In Short Distance, we expect single-digit year-over-year revenue growth in the back half of the year, excluding the impact of our Canada exit. Note that Canada contributed approximately $2 million and $3 million in revenue during Q3 and Q4 2023, respectively, which, depending on the exact timing of our exit, may not reoccur. Jet and Other had a very strong Q2 2024 but the results are inherently volatile in this product line and we expect quarterly revenue to be in the $5 million range in the second half of the year. Passenger segment adjusted EBITDA should see further year-over-year improvements in both Q3 and Q4 2024. We expect adjusted unallocated corporate expenses to be flat to down sequentially for the remainder of the year relative to Q2 2024. I would also like to quickly highlight the updated and comprehensive investor presentation we published this afternoon. We've added detail around our growth and value creation strategy in both Medical and Passenger, including the return profiles of our recent aircraft investments. We hope you find it useful. With that, I'll turn it back over to Rob for a few closing remarks.