Good morning, and welcome to Brookdale's Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Call. It's a pleasure to be here today as Interim CEO. I'm joined by two integral members of the office of the CEO; Dawn Kussow, our Chief Financial Officer; and Chad White, our General Counsel. This morning, I'll provide a high-level review of our second quarter results, followed by an update on the strategic priorities we outlined during the Q1 earnings call. I also will provide updates on a couple of other items of interest. After my remarks, Dawn will present a detailed overview of our second quarter financials, including guidance ranges and our outlook for the remainder of the year. Chad will join us for the Q&A session. Now for second quarter highlights. Brookdale delivered solid second quarter performance. Despite the backdrop surrounding our Annual Shareholder Meeting, the team remained focused and made progress on improving our operations and financial results. We also continued our ongoing portfolio optimization plan. Same community weighted average occupancy for the second quarter came in at 80.7%, growing 190 basis points over the prior year quarter. June month end same-community occupancy came in at 82.8%, which was 240 basis points higher than month-end occupancy in June 2024. July month-end occupancy came in at approximately 83.3%, which was 260 basis points higher than month-end occupancy in July of '24. Recall, roughly the 80% occupancy mark is a critical inflection point for cash flow generation at Brookdale. While delivering occupancy growth, we also held rate as RevPOR on a same community basis grew 2.4% year-over-year. Now that our consolidated portfolio has weighted average occupancy greater than 80%, our focus will be on ensuring rate growth outpaces expense growth while not sacrificing occupancy. We are pleased to report that adjusted EBITDA for the company grew 19.7% quarter-over-quarter and is up 23.4% for the first half of the year. Most importantly, we continue to generate positive adjusted free cash flow for the second quarter in a row. Adjusted free cash flow came in at $20 million for the quarter versus a negative $6 million for 2024 second quarter. For the first 6 months of the year, our adjusted free cash flow is $24 million versus a negative $32 million for the same period last year. Note, our leased portfolio also generated positive adjusted free cash flow for both the first and the second quarters of 2025. Moving on to updates on our strategy. As outlined last quarter, we believe our 5-part strategy remains central to unlocking Brookdale's intrinsic value. To review each. One, improving operating performance. Operational excellence is critical to the success of Brookdale. Higher occupancy, improved rates and robust cash flow will generate the capital necessary for reducing leverage and reinvesting in our business. We are working to accelerate profitable occupancy through revenue yield management, disciplined and appropriate expense oversight, strengthened operational accountability and targeted strategic investment. Last quarter, we outlined a plan to pilot new incentives and pricing promotions to boost occupancy in selected communities. Many translated this statement into Brookdale is "slashing rate" so I'll try to be more clear this quarter. Brookdale is not slashing rate. We remain focused on profitable occupancy and maximizing fixed cost leverage to grow EBITDA and free cash flow. Maximizing fixed cost leverage means we must maintain an occupancy rate greater than 80% while continuing to ensure rate growth that exceeds expense growth. We saw the results of this effort during the quarter where both occupancy and rate grew over the prior year period. A further indicator of improved performance for the quarter can be seen in our occupancy bands. To elaborate, in Q1, there were 143 communities in our less than 70% occupancy band. That number improved by 10% or 14 communities to 129 during the second quarter. 50 of these are slated for disposition through either lease terminations or asset sales and 38 are working with our SWAT teams. Of the remaining 41, 19 require only 1, 2 or 3 move-ins to advance to the next category. Looking at the other end of the spectrum, those communities with greater than 95% occupancy grew from 73 in the first quarter to 88 in the second quarter, an increase of 15 communities or 21% improvement. Two SWAT teams are now in place, covering 137 communities. Team 1 is focused on underperforming high-opportunity locations requiring immediate attention. These properties have seen a 350 basis point occupancy increase and 7% RevPAR growth since Q4 when the team began its work. Team 2 is mainly dedicated to communities that collateralize our upcoming debt refinancings. In this group, we are working to enhance performance to maximize collateral value. These properties saw sequential occupancy growth of 200 basis points and enjoyed 150 basis points of sequential RevPAR growth since the team began its work in May. We are making progress on structuring a permanent distressed asset team that will move across the portfolio, shoring up communities where performance is starting to wane. With a portfolio of just under 600 assets by the end of the year, there always will be some that need extra care and attention. We expect to have this team up and running by the end of the quarter. We are continuing a rigorous cost review to align our expenses with the size of our portfolio. As part of this effort, G&A expenses were reduced by $850,000 in Q2 versus Q1 and are down $1.2 million from 2Q '24. In each case, G&A expense excludes transaction, legal and organizational restructuring costs, which does include costs incurred around our Annual Shareholder Meeting and severance. We are aware further progress needs to be made on our cost structure, and we will continue to focus our efforts on this area during the third quarter. Number two, optimizing our real estate portfolio. We continue to streamline our portfolio to focus on communities with the strongest long-term value creation potential. As of June 30, Brookdale's consolidated portfolio was at 617 communities, 235 leased and 382 owned. As announced previously, we plan to exit 55 leased assets by year-end. We received the transition schedule for these locations in early July and based upon our review, it appears the communities with the most challenged performance will be transitioning later in the year. This compares to our original assumption for guidance modeling purposes that all communities would transition on October 1. As such, we expect to have additional negative pressure on our consolidated financials during the transition time. Dawn has incorporated this new timeline in the updated guidance that she will speak to in a few minutes. During Q2, we closed on the sale of 1 owned community and the transition of 1 leased property. Of the remaining 13 previously announced dispositions, all but one are under contract. Also, we've recently identified another 28 assets that will be leaving the portfolio and expect those to transition over the next 12 to 18 months. As with the original 14 community dispositions announced last quarter, we believe the exit of this additional group will result in improved occupancy, RevPAR, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted free cash flow while generating cash proceeds that can be used for capital reinvestment and debt repayments. Note, of the 41 assets to be sold, 27 are in the under 70% occupancy band. Three, capital reinvestment. Reinvestment in our communities is essential to maintaining market relevance and quality and to accelerating profitable occupancy growth. In Q2, we invested $49 million into capital projects and have over 500 capital-related projects underway from aesthetic upgrades to larger renovations. Four, reducing leverage. Deleveraging enhances financial resilience and shareholder value. While it will not happen overnight, we are working to reduce leverage meaningfully through continued adjusted EBITDA and cash flow growth as well as portfolio optimization. To that end, during the second quarter, we reduced our adjusted annualized leverage from 9.7x to 9.3x. Recall, approximately 88% of our debt is nonrecourse, secured by property-level mortgages. Upon asset sales, mortgage obligations are fully repaid and excess proceeds may be deployed toward growth, reinvestment or further debt reduction. As noted earlier, during the quarter, we sold 1 owned asset, have LOIs or purchase agreements on an additional 13 assets and have identified another 28 for disposition. As we have demonstrated, we are committed to taking appropriate actions to unlock the intrinsic value of our real estate to drive shareholder value creation, and we will continue to look for ways to optimize our portfolio and reduce our leverage profile. Nearly all of our debt is refinanced through 2026, and the team has made excellent progress working with our lenders on the 2027 tranches. Number five, elevating quality for residents and associates. Almost 50,000 seniors call Brookdale Home and over 36,000 associates choose us as their employer. This quarter, two of our culinary experts were recognized with Senior Housing News', DISHED Dining Innovation Awards. Bethany Johnson, a District Director of Operations in Florida, was selected by the Florida Senior Living Association as Outstanding Operator of the Year for 2025. Our very own CFO, Dawn Kussow, was inducted into the McKnight's Women of Distinction Hall of Fame Class for 2025, recognizing her outstanding talent and service to Brookdale. We are pleased the industry is recognizing the top talent that serves our residents every day. Moving on to shareholder engagement and the CEO search. We are grateful that each of our director nominees received the support of a majority of our shareholders at this year's annual meeting, and we appreciate the constructive feedback we received throughout the process. This feedback is instrumental in how we will shape Brookdale's path forward. Management and the Board considers the feedback received from all shareholders to be important, and we will use it to further strengthen our governance and our operations, and we will refine how we communicate Brookdale's value proposition. As you review the information contained in our investor deck and supplement, we hope you will recognize many of your suggestions. Lastly, the CEO Search Committee has reviewed approximately 50 potential candidates, casting a wide net across senior housing, health care, hospitality and real estate. The committee and full Board have interviewed a number of candidates. And with the annual meeting now behind us, we aim to conclude the process in the coming months. Out of respect for all participants in the process, we will not take questions on the search during today's call. To close, Brookdale's strategy is taking hold and driving improved performance. We are energized by our strong momentum and the promising opportunities for growth that lie ahead. Thank you for your interest in and support of Brookdale. With that, I'll turn the call over to Dawn.