Thanks, Anne, and good morning, everyone. We are pleased to report another quarter of strong earnings growth with core FFO of $1.27 per diluted share for the second quarter, driven by a 2.4% year-over-year increase in same-store NOI. Revenues from same-store communities increased by 3.4% compared to the second quarter of 2023 with the increase driven by a 3.3% increase in revenue per occupied home and a 10 basis point year-over-year increase in weighted average occupancy, which stood at 95.3% for the quarter. Property operating expenses were up by 5.1% year-over-year, mainly driven by higher repairs and maintenance spend during the early part of the summer and higher insurance premiums. Although significant, the increase in repairs and maintenance costs was not unexpected as the timing of these projects tends to vary throughout the year. This did not have an impact on our full year expectations. Turning to guidance. We updated our 2024 expectations in last night's press release. For 2024, we now expect core FFO of $4.85 at the midpoint, which is an increase of $0.02 compared to our prior expectations and an increase of $0.07 versus last year's results. These improved expectations are driven by an increase of 0.25% in the midpoint of year-over-year same-store NOI growth guidance to 3.5%. While our expectations of year-over-year revenue growth remained unchanged at the midpoint, we did lower the projected increase in same-store total expense growth to 4.1% based on better-than-expected expense levels across the board during the first half of the year. Moving onto other components of guidance. We now expect G&A and property management expenses for the year to range between $27.4 million to $27.9 million and interest expense to range between $36.5 million to $36.9 million. Lower interest expense is primarily driven by the use of equity issued under our ATM program to pay down debt on our line of credit. We expect to spend $2 million less on value-add initiatives during the year, while per unit capital expenditures are up slightly at the midpoint to $1,125 per unit. And lastly we have, as of today, fully funded our $15.1 million mezzanine investment in the development project in the Minneapolis area. No additional acquisitions, dispositions, issuances or borrowings are factored into our guidance. Implicitly, our full year guidance suggests that we'll see lower core FFO per share in the second half of the year than we did in the first. While we don't intend to introduce quarterly guidance, there are a few notable items during the first half of the year, such as lower utilities costs due to a milder winter, the tax refund that equated to about $0.04 per share in the first quarter and a refund in the second quarter of $300,000 in health insurance costs affecting the comparison. In addition, we expect normal seasonality of repairs and maintenance costs including the return costs, leading to a higher expense for that line item in Q3 and we generally incur a higher level of our normal annual G&A and overhead costs during the second half of the year. On the capital front, we took a couple of steps during and subsequent to quarter end to further strengthen our balance sheet. We sold roughly 540,000 shares under our ATM program, raising over $37 million. About $30 million of the issuance occurred after the end of the quarter and we have incorporated that within our full year guidance. We will always be mindful of the impact of issuance. Our previous guidance assumed that we would draw roughly $40 million on our line of credit this year. The recent opportunity to pay down that high 6% rate debt not only improves our balance sheet profile, but it has allowed us to do so without diluting earnings and it did not have a material impact on our full year guidance. In fact, it is accretive on a cash flow basis and reduced our pro forma leverage to 6.7 times, the lowest it has ever been. Additionally, subsequent to quarter-end, we completed the recast of our line of credit, which now matures in 2028 and we were able to do so without making any changes to our bank group and on terms similar to the existing facility in a much more challenging lending environment relative to when it was initially established. We have a well-laddered debt maturity schedule that at quarter-end had a weighted average cost of 3.6% and a weighted average time to maturity of 5.7 years. To conclude, we are proud of the results we achieved in the quarter and I commend our Centerspace team on providing us with an excellent first half of the year. We look forward to building upon these results in the rest of 2024. And with that, I will turn the line back to the operator for your questions.