Thanks, Eric, and good morning, everyone. Let me begin by acknowledging the great work of our team in delivering for our customers. As Eric noted, the demand environment [and] ES is robust. Our people are playing an integral role in helping to drive that demand because of their valuable skill set and through the use of technology tools and resources that enable our customers to increase their efficiency and productivity. Moving to Slide 5. Our SKSS segment had a challenging first quarter, falling short of our profitability expectations. The segment experienced a slower seasonal pickup in pricing in March than we had anticipated. As we move into Q2, the pricing environment for base oil has remained weak as noted by the recent price decreases across the sector in early April. On the top line, SKSS revenue grew 7% due to higher base oil volumes and revenue from the small acquisition we completed last June as well as higher sales of ancillary services. SKSS adjusted EBITDA decreased by 20%, resulting in lower margins. The variance was driven by weaker-than-normal seasonal pricing, which compressed our near-term re-refining spread. Buyers have been slow to come off the sidelines to start the annual driving season. Consequently, we faced a difficult comparison with the first half of last year when we saw five price increases in the first six months, leading to the significant margin expansion experienced in the first half of 2022. Our primary focus recently has been on the collection cost for UMO, which we manage in response to market pricing. Waste oil collections in the quarter were strong at 59 million gallons, up 11% from a year ago. We began rapidly lowering our pay for oil pricing over the course of the quarter in response to the market, a decision we expect to help us in the coming months. Blended product sales accounted for 15% of total output from our plants. Our direct volumes, which are -- which we are implementing our closed-loop approach, we're at 7% or nearly half of all blended volumes. Despite a slow start in Q1, our goal remains to increase our blended volumes this year. We expect both, our direct and wholesale blended, sales to improve as we move deeper into 2023 given the investments we have made. Turning to Slide 6 and our capital allocation strategy. On the M&A front, we continue to see a good flow of potential transactions, particularly bolt-on deals for both operating segments. As Eric mentioned, we completed the Thompson Industrial acquisition on the last day of Q1 in an all-cash deal for approximately $110 million. This transaction expands our presence in the Southeast U.S. for Industrial services. It also broadens our position in verticals where we have sold Environmental Services but not Industrial Services, including paper, mining and power. We're off to a great start and are impressed with the Thompson team. Whether Industrial Services or other Service Businesses, we will continue to target companies that are synergistic and afford us opportunities to cross-sell. Eric Dugas will touch on our balance sheet in his remarks. But from a debt perspective, the key takeaway is that we're maintaining a flexible, strong balance sheet that will enable us to remain opportunistic with M&A. We continue to evaluate internal investment opportunity to drive organic growth. We've talked on previous calls about our new state-of-the-art incinerator in Kimball, Nebraska. That 70,000 tons of annual capacity remains on plan, on budget and on schedule to open for business in early 2025. Given market conditions, we certainly wish it were sooner. Overall, we are pleased with how well we have started 2023 despite challenges on the base oil side and with some of our facilities. Within ES, we exited the quarter on a strong trajectory. Each of our businesses are in great shape as we move into our seasonally stronger quarters. While questions about the macroeconomic environment remain, we have yet to see any slowdowns in our ES segment. Underlying market conditions remain favorable, which also speaks to the essential nature of what we provide to our customers. Our record backlog of waste positions us well for the rest of the year. Our Q1 performance also reflects the diverse nature of our business model. Within SKSS, we expect the market to stabilize with the approach of the summer driving season. That said, short-term pricing pressures is a challenge. Therefore, our focus is on continuing to control what we can control. That means controlling costs across this business. Specifically, we are aggressively managing our waste oil collection costs, while ensuring we have enough supply to feed our re-refineries. Our bulk Products and Services, or PPS organization, which we established three years ago, allowed us to more nimbly adjust our collection costs. Based on current market conditions, as we sit here today, we are currently at a net charge for oil position with our collections. Clearly, the current pricing environment is more challenging than we anticipated when we gave our initial 2023 guidance. This is why we are lowering our 2023 expectations for this segment, which Eric Dugas will share shortly. We believe our ES segment will be able to offset the slowdown in SKSS. We are going to continue to drive SKSS profitability to minimize the spread compression through several areas. These include greater base oil production compared with a year ago as much as 10 million gallons or more, accelerating blended sales and cultivating interest in our environmentally friendly solutions through our new KLEEN+ base oil brand. We remain committed to the long-term growth of this segment as part of Vision 2027 plan, we introduced at Investor Day. With that, let me turn over to our CFO, Eric Dugas.