Thank you, Greg. Thank you, Jim. I want to start off talking about the California Supreme Court case that came out on July 8. As many of you probably have read the California Supreme Court in a unanimous decision ruled in favor of the 4 investment water utilities that brought to suit against the PUC. It's very important to note that the decision helps preserve decoupling and also protects the rights of utilities to have due process in the rate-making process. As you know, we are big believers in conservation. Decoupling in California goes back to the 70s when it was first used in the electric and gas industry, has played a major role in helping California reach its sustainability and renewability goals. We feel the outcome is really important because it enforces the importance of due process and rate making. In other words, the commission has to follow the rules that are set forth in the rate-making process as well as the company. But it also allows us to continue to better align with the state of California's goals around sustainability, reliability, affordability and conservation. If you follow the California rules over the last couple of years, California has gotten very aggressive at the state level about making conservation of water life. As I mentioned, decoupling is a very important tool that helps keep our customer rates affordable as we promote conservation to improve sustainability of critical water resources. So we're very happy with the outcome from the states of report. And as Greg mentioned, in the current filing that we just filed earlier this month, we have again submitted plans for approval to reimplement decoupling for our customers in the State of California. Moving on to Slide 14. I want to talk a little bit about where we are with fire season and our emergency response programs. If you've been watching the news or if you look at the fire maps for the state of California, there are times, it feels like the majority of the state is really on fire. So far this year, we've had 3 major fires near our service territories. We've got the Thompson fire, the Park fire and the Borel Fire. Currently, as we speak, the Park fire and the Borel Fire are still burning. The Thompson fire, which took place early July was around our Orgill service area and a firm approximately 3,800 acres in a very small community in Northern California. The Park fire and the Borel Fire, which started about a day apart, one was near Chico, California, which is burned to date as of the slowing 391,000 acres. That's equivalent to 610 square miles, and it's approximately 18% contained. The Borel Fire, which is in Bakersfield, which is more Central California in the Kern River area has burned approximately 59,000 acres and is 39% contained. I'm very happy to report that despite these fires coming very close to Cal Water assets, none of our assets have been affected are destroyed by fires. And the company has just done an outstanding job at working with first responders and betting our employees into the county and state DCs to help ordinate water supply and to make sure that we do what we can to make sure the firefighters have what they need to bolt these wildfires. Unfortunately, it's very indicative that this is going to be a long fire season. And as we get into the months of August, September and October, I believe we'll be expending a lot of resources dealing with the continuation of what was a very wet winter and what now has been a very hot, dry summer. Along with that, one of the things we do each year is we set certain corporate goals to host a certain number of what we call community EOCs or community emergency operations center exercises. We tend to target these exercises and communities that don't necessarily have all the resources to pull off both table top exercises, help communities and first responders better prepare for disasters. Recently, we hosted 2 of these events in the State of Hawaii, one on the island of Maui and one on the Big Island of Hawaii or what's also known as Kai Post. Both of these events were very well attended by first responders, local state and mobile and state officials, including members of the Hawaii Public Utilities Commission, civil defense, critical infrastructure companies, including the electric company, the county water departments and other people who are playing an important role in dealing with these disasters. In my part of the presentation that I gave at the classes in Hawaii, and the classes include 2 pieces. There's a class piece of it, which is really how to use the Incident Command System, which is a basic FEMA model for dealing with emergencies. So that's the classroom-led part of the day. And the second part of it is a hands-on disaster simulation. As I told, the people in the class I was participating in, I called the 3Cs. It's absolutely critical that we -- that we connect, we communicate and we coordinate. And when we do that as critical infrastructure companies helping first responders, we help save lives. And that's very, very important in the world that we live in today, in a world that has been planning to change. Moving on to the next slide. I want to give you a brief update on where we are with the new PFAS, PFOS standards. And we're moving forward with our plans to implement our treatments on approximately 101 wells. If you look at the footnote on Jim's slides, which were Slide 9 and 10, you'll see that our estimates have changed a little bit based on more data that we've been able to gather as before project plans together. So that number increased approximately $11 million to $226 million. As of right now, that's our best guess cost to treat the 101 wells that require treatment. By the way, that's 101 wells at approximately 1,170 wells, so given an idea of what part of our portfolio requires treatment. Just to remind everyone that the $226 million is not included in the capital forecast on the rate base slide or the capital investment slide. It's included in footnote. And the $1.6 billion that was included in the 2024 general rate case does not include these costs. So they're incremental to the investment projections that we've given the Street so far today. And we expect to refine these costs as more information comes in with the project plan. But overall, we're moving forward. We believe we will be adopting the standard ahead of schedule within our service territory. Our goal is to have them implemented within the next 3 years. And also, one important milestone that was reached in the quarter is that we did file our Phase 1 plan form in the 3M and DuPont Class Action settlements. So those Class Action settlements discussions are moving forward. As a reminder, Cal Water is the class rep and all PFAS matters representing the industry in those discussions. So overall, moving forward with areas, our estimates moved up a little bit, but we are charging ahead as planned. Moving on to Slide 16, to give a brief update on what's happening on the business development and M&A side. It was a fairly quiet quarter for us. We did complete one very, very small but strategic acquisition called Kings Mountain Park Mutual Water Company. The significance of this certainly is not in size, but it's the fact that this little system light in between our Bear Gulch system and the Skyline System here in the Bay Area that we acquired about a year ago. So our roots go back to Bear Gulch for a long, long time. We've owned and operated that system for a long time. Last year, we acquired the Skyline system, and we just closed on the Kings Mountain system. Putting these 3 pieces together allows for a more efficient deployment of capital and improves reliability and allows us to ultimately improve service to the customers in that area. More importantly, I think it's a good example of how we continue to consolidate and grow an existing service area that's been built out. The only thing about the San Francisco Bay area, this is on the peninsula side of the Bay Area as you got the 101 corridor. So even where are places that may not look like there might not be opportunities to be more efficient, they clearly are. And I think this acquisition represents a good example of how we do this to continue to grow and try to become more efficient. Since 2019, we have completed over 36,000 connections that we've added to our platform using this kind of tuck-in strategy, and we anticipate that we will continue to add at least 1%, 1.5% new connections going out forward into the future using the strategy. Next, I want to take a moment to give you an update on our ESG report that was filed in May. If you look -- if you're interested in ESG, our plan aligns with the sustainability accounting standards board and their water utility service industry standards. It references the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures, TCFD, and it references the Global Reporting Initiative Standards GRI. So all that information is available in our plan. In the report that was just filed, we make our commitment to reduce our greenhouse gases. So 1 and Scope 2 greenhouse gases by 63% by the year 2035. We plan on accomplishing this through a multi-platform approach that includes the electrification of our fleet, continuing aggressive water conservation, building alternative energy sources of supplies in some of our service areas and aggressively going after renewable electricity procurement. As you may recall, water utilities use a lot of energy and pumping and transporting water. And we believe using this multi-platform approach, we can easily achieve these goals by 2035 and hopefully ahead of schedule. In addition, I want to point out just a couple of fun things. Obviously, the water quality compliance, that is a core part of our G&A that we meet and exceed all the primary sector water quality standards every day that we operate in all the states that we operate in. And that's a big part of our bonus plan that our employees participate in. But if you saw a few weeks ago, we announced that we just completed our 10th year of our scholarship program. So this year, Cal Water again awarded more than $80,000 to 12 students in California, Hawaii and Washington. Since starting the program in 2014, we have awarded more than $750,000 to students in our service area, and we're very, very proud to do that. And one of the things about being a 98 year old water company sometimes as you forget about the younger people, this program that we've been out for executive has been very, very successful -- and it's a lot of fun going through the application process and looking at some of the students of our customers, many of whom are first-generation college students, what their goals are and what they're studying and how they want to be get their education and come back and help make their communities a better place. So we're very, very proud of that scholarship program. And then lastly, I want to share with everyone that recently, ISS updated our ESG score to 72.28. That's a raw score of 72.28. On their scale that gives us a B+ and well a B+ is not an A. There are no As that have an ESG score in the water utility space, we are the highest-rated ESG score for an investor on water utility in North America according to ISS. So just kudos to our ESG team on our continuing implementation of our strategy as we move forward in dealing with climate change and how we support our communities, employees and our shareholders. So in conclusion, overall, a solid quarter, as Jim mentioned. I know the numbers are a little bit confusing. I apologize for that. There was circumstances beyond our control. We had to book all of the '21 rate case in '24 and not '23. But clearly, you're seeing the benefit of the rate relief start to flow in with the company. I'm very, very happy with the capital numbers that Jim shared with you, the 9.9% kind of quarter-over-quarter and the 21% kind of year-to-date growth on CapEx. I think that's indicative of our continued focus on our infrastructure improvement plans. And how we're trying to improve sustainability and reliability on behalf of our customers. Q3 is typically our busiest quarter, and it's usually our peak demand quarter from an operations perspective. As I mentioned, it's going to be busy just in the normal course of operations, but we're also dealing with a very significant fire season this year. And so as I mentioned, we have 2 fires right now that we've been allocating resources to the Boral fire and the Park fire. And so it's going to be a very, very busy quarter from a fire prevention perspective and working our first responders to make sure they have what they need to spike fires. Having said that, it's also -- we're in the middle of the rate case. And so all the data requests are coming in and going through working with through the request of the California advocates -- so we'll continue to try to keep our general rate case on schedule. But overall, I'm very happy with the performance for the quarter. I'm happy we've got our rate case filed on time. I'm happy that we are continuing our growth and our capital programs. And more importantly, I think I'm happy that we're doing what we do on the emergency response side because, again, if you follow those 3Cs, you help save lives. And at the end of the day, I think that's one of the most important things that we do. So with that Dee, I'm going to hand it back to you, and we will open it up for questions.