Thanks, Al, and good afternoon. The third quarter of 2025 marks another milestone in Willdan's growth. In the third quarter, we continued to execute very well, delivering results that exceeded the Street expectations and our own forecasts across all key metrics. Against a strong Q3 last year, net revenue grew by 26% year-over-year, driven by an outstanding 20% organic growth rate. 2025 will mark the fourth consecutive year that we've produced double-digit organic growth. Margins also continued to expand in Q3, concurrently with significant investments for our future, with electric load growth expected to increase over the next decade, driven by data centers and electrification. Willdan's unique capabilities and execution position us well to sustain long-term growth. As a result, we are again raising our full year financial targets, which Kim will present a little later. Turning to Slide 3. Willdan delivers a broad range of energy and infrastructure solutions to utilities, commercial customers and state and local governments. On the left side of the slide, the Energy segment makes up about 85% of our revenue, while our Engineering and Consulting work makes up about 15%. On the right side, demand remains healthy across all customer groups. The 15% of work for commercial customers is mostly centered around electricity usage at data centers, where AI-driven load growth is creating significant demand. Willdan is helping technology clients navigate energy constraints, optimize infrastructure and meet aggressive power requirements. Our Utility business makes up about 41% of revenue and continues to perform well. Most of our utility contracts are 3 to 5 years in duration, funded by rate payer fees and continue to provide a strong foundation of recurring revenue. The size of our long-term utility programs is generally increasing across the country as energy efficiency can be viewed as a power resource. Work for state and local governments makes up 44% of revenue and continues to grow organically at a double-digit pace. Demand from our government customers remains solid, and the outlook is positive. Most of our government work is funded through user fees and municipal bonds, which have remained healthy. On Slide 4. Our upfront policy, forecasting and data analytics work informs our strategy and helps us navigate market change. In our upfront work, we see particular demand for studies on the impacts of electricity load growth, and that work is growing at about 50% organically year-over-year. Those market changes led us to the APG acquisition that provides Power Engineering solutions to data center clients, hyperscalers and other commercial customers. I'm pleased to report that APG is collaborating very effectively with the rest of Willdan and has already won record backlog that we expect will propel more than 50% growth by APG in 2026. In other parts of Engineering, we saw strong execution and growth with both commercial and municipal customers. In Program Management, we performed above our plan on utility programs and building energy programs for cities. Demonstrating this model in an example, we are hired by technology hyperscalers to identify the optimal sites for data centers. We then provide clients, consulting, engineering and project management to supply the electricity that powers those centers. The new generation of data centers usually requires high-voltage power, often hundreds of megawatts with a dedicated utility scale substation and utility interconnect. After a data center is built, Willdan provides energy optimization inside the data center as we have done for many years. Each step with the customer informs the next step. This model extends across all of our service lines. On Slide 5. We have a strong pipeline of opportunities that we are converting into contracts, and the pipeline remains solid heading into 2026. Here are just a few examples we converted since our last conference call. For Alameda County, California, we won a 2-year $97 million project to design and implement energy and infrastructure upgrades at county infrastructure throughout San Francisco's East Bay. For a confidential client, we won 2 substations for solar storage projects worth a combined $21.7 million in Oregon and Georgia. For a confidential client in Texas, we won a $14 million substation project for a solar energy storage system and a $7.8 million greenfield substation project. In Utah, we won a $3.6 million project to expand an existing substation. And I'll note that projects 2 through 5 on the table were all led by our recent APG acquisition. They're doing very well. On Slide 6. In early October, Willdan's E3 subsidiary published new research on electricity load growth. This research forecasts between 0.7 terawatt hours and 1.2 terawatt hours of U.S. electricity load growth over the next 10 years. The drivers are broad-based and extend well beyond the data center load growth now often talked about to include new industrial demand, electric vehicles and the electrification of building systems. The colors on the bar chart depict the relative proportions of load growth drivers. This load growth is transforming electricity markets from a one static landscape into a dynamic long-term growth market. On Slide 7. Looking globally, this map demonstrates that current data center electricity load expressed in gigawatts is by far the greatest in the United States right here. The map also puts into perspective just how large Northern Virginia data center electricity load is compared to anywhere else in the world. We've previously talked about our landmark study for Virginia on the impacts of this load, which has led to several more similar studies for data center developers and utilities. Willdan is in the right market at the right time and is building the right set of capabilities to help clients navigate electricity load growth. Utilities are also investing to enhance reliability and flexibility as more distributed resources come online, requiring significant modernization of aging infrastructure. Together, these forces are driving one of the largest infrastructure investment cycles in decades, and Willdan is well positioned to help utilities and communities navigate this transformation. I'm very pleased with the way our team is performing. Now Kim, over to you.