Thank you, Paul. As Paul mentioned, we closed our merger on September 1 with Berkshire as the legal acquirer and Brookline as the accounting acquirer. As such, historical results reflect Brookline performance and the assets and liabilities of Berkshire were mark-to-market and combined with Brookline as of September 1. On a combined basis, we finished the quarter with total assets of $22.8 billion. And on September 1, the fair value of Berkshire assets was $12.1 billion, of which we sold approximately $426 million, $177 million in securities and $249 million in loans. The proceeds were used to reduce wholesale funding. Excluding the purchase accounting mark, the combined loan portfolio declined $484 million during the quarter, largely driven by the sale of $249 million of purchased residential mortgage loans and the reclass of $83 million in similar loans to held for sale. The sale of those loans closed in October, except for a small pool, which closes next week. On the funding side, combined customer deposits increased $89 million. Payroll deposits declined $186 million, while broker deposits and borrowings declined by $249 million and $74 million, respectively. At the end of the quarter, the loan-to-deposit ratio was 96.5%. The allowance for loan losses finished at $254 million, reflecting a coverage ratio of 139 basis points. The allowance includes $77 million in specific reserves on approximately $380 million of loans, representing a coverage rate of 20%. The general reserve of $177 million represents a 99 basis point coverage on the balance of the portfolio. Given the strong coverage rate in the current environment, we expect that while charge-offs may remain elevated as we continue to work through these substandard assets, we expect the run rate for the provision to be $5 million to $9 million a quarter as the reserve coverage ratio trends lower. Net charge-offs for the quarter were $15.8 million, all but $1.4 million of the charge-offs were previously reserved for. Our quarterly results reflect 2 months of earnings for Brookline and 1 month of earnings on a combined basis. The quarter also included the merger charges and purchase accounting associated with the transaction. We will continue to have merger charges through the first quarter when our core systems integrations are completed and the remaining cost synergies realized. As we anticipated, we reported a GAAP loss for the third quarter of $56 million or $0.64 per share. The third quarter included pretax charges of $130 million, $78 million related to the initial provision expense and $52 million in merger expenses. Excluding these charges, operating earnings were $39 million or $0.44 per share. The net interest margin was 372 basis points for the quarter, which included a 30 basis point benefit from purchase accounting. We provided the performance for the month of September, representing the first month of performance on a combined basis and adjusted for the onetime merger-related charges. This is provided on Page 5 of the presentation. Net interest income for September was $72 million, which included $10.7 million in purchase accounting accretion for the month and resulted in a net interest margin of 412 basis points for September. Of the $10.7 million, $3.8 million was related to the credit mark with the remaining $6.9 million related to the interest rate mark. Of the $6.9 million, $1.8 million is due to loan prepayments. We expect FASB to release the final rule on accounting for acquired loans and the credit mark to be reversed in the fourth quarter, increasing equity and no longer reflected in income going forward. We currently estimate purchase accounting accretion to be in the range of $15 million to $20 million per quarter, depending on loan prepayment activity. Noninterest income was $8.5 million for the month, reflecting a $25 million to $26 million quarterly run rate. Noninterest expense of $40.6 million for the month captured some of the day 1 synergies created by the merger and reflects a quarterly run rate of $122 million. Amortization of intangibles at $2.7 million for the month reflects an $8.1 million quarterly run rate. Provision for credit losses for September was $6.6 million, but as is typical, true-up of reserves and provision requirements take place in the third month of the quarter. As I stated earlier, we anticipate quarterly provisions to be in the range of $5 million to $9 million. The September operating performance of 129 basis points on assets and over 15% return on tangible equity illustrates the strong performance of the combined franchise and the potential opportunity going forward. Yesterday, the Board approved increasing our quarterly dividend to $0.3225 per share to be paid on November 24 to stockholders of record on November 10. This represents a 79% increase in the cash dividends previously received by Berkshire shareholders and maintains the level of cash dividends previously received by Brookline stockholders. The quarterly dividend equates to an annual dividend of $1.29 per share, which was communicated when we announced the merger and currently represents a dividend yield of approximately 5.4%. As Paul mentioned, the team is optimistic and excited as we continue to deliver on the merger benefits. This continues my formal comments, and I'll turn it back to Paul.