Thank you, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. I'd also like to share my gratitude for the hard work and dedication of our team. As Jeff mentioned, our team did an incredible job in the face of a challenging backdrop during the quarter, with uncooperative weather and an ongoing inflationary environment. Let me provide some additional details on the quarter on Slide 8. EPS for the first quarter of 2023 was $2.04, again slightly below last year's results. From a top-line perspective, regulated infrastructure programs and recovery mechanisms, including the Florida rate case, were the greatest contributor to our adjusted gross margin growth. Higher fees and margins per gallon in our propane business, along with pipeline expansions, organic growth and increased demand for our virtual pipeline services contributed a combined $6.4 million in incremental adjusted gross margin. Offsetting this growth, lower consumption tied to warmer weather conditions was the main driver. On Slide 9, our financial summary shows adjusted gross margin increased $3.8 million and operating income increased slightly. As expected, interest expense was notably higher in quarter one compared to the same period last year as higher interest rates didn't fully materialize until later in 2022. Despite these challenges, earnings per share came in just $0.04 lower than the last year's first quarter, where weather was significantly colder. From our perspective, these results were truly a testament to our team's continued ability to navigate well through unprecedented weather while continuing to drive our long-term growth initiatives forward. On Slide 10, let me go through our EPS walk for the quarter. First, we recognized a $0.07 gain from the reset of deferred income taxes associated with the reduction in Pennsylvania state income tax. This is a one-time nonrecurring item and should be considered as such, going forward. Our core businesses, absent the weather impact, delivered additional margin contributions that increased earnings by $0.45 per share, again, really nice growth in our core business. This includes higher adjusted gross margin from regulatory initiatives, transmission expansion projects, natural gas distribution organic customer growth, increased margins from our CNG, RNG and LNG services, and higher fees and margins per gallon from our propane operations. Partially offsetting this growth was reduced volumes driven primarily by warmer weather, which came in as a $0.29 negative impact. Higher operating expenses tied to our core business drove a $0.10 impact. Keep in mind, had weather been less of a headwind, operating expenses would have been higher. As an example of this, Sharp would have paid additional drivers to deliver more propane. I just want to be clear that, had normal weather occurred, incremental volumes would have resulted in higher expenses. So the $0.29 reduction in earnings doesn't translate to a one-for-one increase should temperatures normalize. Higher depreciation, amortization and property tax costs associated with new capital investments were a $0.05 expense impact. Finally, interest and other changes were a $0.12 negative impact compared to last year's first quarter. Moving to the next two slides. Let me touch on Chesapeake Utilities' operating segments. On Slide 11, you'll see adjusted gross margin for the regulated energy segment was up 5.5% for the quarter. Operating income increased 8.5%, again, an impressive level given the backdrop we've been discussing. Turning to Slide 12. Adjusted gross margin for the unregulated segment was down just 1.6%, with warmer temperatures impacting margins more in a meaningful way for our Sharp and Aspire businesses. Fortunately, organic growth initiatives helped counteract the weather impact. For example, Marlin drove nice margin growth with increased demand for their virtual pipeline solutions. Despite all the positive margin drivers, overall, operating income for the segment was down 14%. On Slide 13, I'll provide some highlights of our strong balance sheet position. In March, we issued the previously announced $80 million of 15-year senior notes to Prudential, with a 10-year average life and at a coupon of 5.43%. This is the primary driver that reduced our short-term debt to $94 million, mitigating our exposure to continued rising interest rates. We will continue to take appropriate steps to manage interest expense. At the end of the quarter, total capitalization represented approximately $1.63 billion. This included 52.7% stockholders' equity, which is now $859 million and within our target capital range, 40.3% of long-term debt at an average fixed rate of 3.89% and only 7% short-term debt given the long-term debt financing I just mentioned. Moving to Slide 14, we highlight our major projects, including the pipeline expansions, CNG, LNG and RNG transportation projects and strategic regulatory initiatives, which will drive our adjusted gross margin growth this year and next. As always, we remind you that this table does not include organic growth, and it is not indicative of all the projects that we are evaluating and pursuing. We continue to be encouraged with the opportunities that are presented by our business development team and look forward to announcing other projects in the future. Combined, these initiatives are expected to add more than $21 million in 2023 and approximately $7.2 million in additional margin for 2024. As new projects or initiatives are announced or finalized, we will add them to this table. As you can see, we have placeholders to add the incremental margin estimates for the Lake Wales expansion and the latest Florida infrastructure program, which we have now labeled as GUARD. Moving to Slide 15, we highlight our key pipeline expansion projects and the increased level of activity in 2023. With an investment of approximately $65 million, these projects are expected to contribute more than $10 million in adjusted gross margin per year once completed. With that, I would like to finish by reiterating my opening comments about the effort of our team to remain focused on our organizational imperatives during the first quarter, which includes safety, team, service, improve and grow. While the weather prevented us from delivering EPS growth compared to the first quarter of last year, we remain committed to achieving our long-running track record of year-over-year earnings per share growth and delivering industry-leading performance. The diversity of our operations, strong organic growth, a pipeline of investment growth opportunities, regulatory innovation and our talented workforce will continue to drive long-term earnings performance for our stakeholders. I will now pass the call to Jim Moriarty to discuss our regulatory and company culture updates. Jim?