Thanks, Jim. I am on Slide 10 and I am pleased to report that yesterday, our Board of Directors approved our 321st consecutive quarterly dividend in the amount of $0.30 a share. As a reminder, in January of this year, we announced a dividend increase of $0.08 a share plus a special one-time increase of $0.04 a share, bringing the annual dividend from $1.24, up from $1.12. The dividend increase for 2025 represents about a 10.7% dividend increase and gives us a 5-year comp annual growth rate of 7.7% on the dividend line, which we think is a very healthy number. The special one-time dividend was met and approved by our Board of Directors to reward our stockholders who dealt with the delayed 2021 generate case and the financial challenges that it brought forth with it, including deciphering some of the financial reporting that Jim has been working on, I think, has done a good job with the financial statements this quarter. Looking to Slide 11 moving on to some stuff on the regulatory side, the California 2021 general rate case continues to move forward on schedule. Following the issuance from the California Public Advocates, they are basically reviewing the report of our rate case. We submitted our rebuttal testimony and we participated in settlement discussions during the month of April. While we are not able to reach a global settlement with the California Public Advocates, we are now working to identify areas of agreement in order to streamline the upcoming evidentiary hearings which will take place this month, the month of May. We remain confident in our test way that we provided in the rate case. I think as most of you know, we’ve – the last three cycles, we’ve invested heavily in how we plan for capital and execute our capital programs and we remain confident in our testimony and we look forward to moving into the evidential hearing phase of the process with the commissioner and with the judge. Moving on to Slide 12, a couple of other things that are noteworthy on the regulatory side. First and foremost, as part of the 2021 general rate case decision we are authorized to get what’s called an annual escalation rate. And so for 2025 that was filed – it is subject to an earnings test and I am very pleased to report that the majority of our districts pass that earnings test and it represents a $27.2 million additional revenue requirement that was adopted for this year. These rates went into effect of January 1. In addition, in California, the Palos Verdes – excuse me, Palos Verdes Peninsula Water Reliability project, that’s what happens when you let engineers name projects, they get really long. So I call it the Palos Verdes project. It was the largest project in the company’s history, which is replacing about 15 miles of main and kind of downtown Palos Verdes and kind of urban LA area. In January, we received a final decision approving the inclusion of $14.2 million of incremental capital cost for this project. So that’s been added to rate base. In addition, the decision allows us for a temporary surcharge to recover $3.8 million of carrying costs associated with that project. These new base rates were implemented in February and the surcharge we hit in April so last month. In addition, in California, in January, we received approval to recover $1.4 million in drought-related costs that have been tracked through the account. Related surcharges were implemented on April 1 of this year. Looking on a couple of other regulatory events that are happening around our systems turning to Hawaii. During the first quarter, we reached the settlement with the Ka’anapali general rate case with the Hawaii consumer advocates. The settlement sets a test year revenue at $7.5 million. So that’s a $1.1 million increase in revenue. So that will be going into effect later this month. And then lastly, kind of looking on to Slide 13, looking at our water supply going into the spring, that’s always a hot topic out west with the climate change. Overall, it’s been a very healthy winner out here on the West Coast. We have a strong snow pack in overall in California. It was 99% of normal for the month of April. For those of you that know the topography associated with California, the Sierras, it’s a very, very long range. And so you can be as far south as Southern California down in L.A. and all the way up well past Tahoe into Northern California. So, the range within the range is 85% to 120%. But overall, we are about 99% of normal on the snowfall for the state of California. This coupled with a very heavy rainfall during the winter and spring months, has put us in really good shape. And the major reservoirs remain above historical averages and we feel really good about the decision California is going into the summer months. We do not expect any other water supply issues in other states, including Washington, New Mexico and for the majority of Hawaii. Although in West Maui, West Maui continues to be in a drought and target conservation efforts are underway, but we do not expect any material issues in that area. Hawaii is a state that we are spending – maybe let me say it this way, taking a lot of the lessons learned in California in our conservation programs and applying that to states that have newer issues associated with drought and drought management. So we are taking a lot of the lessons learned in California and have planned those in our conservation programs in the West Maui area. So with that, moving to Slide #14, looking at the year ahead, as I mentioned at the beginning, it is the third year of the rate case cycle in California. This is historically a period where we see heightened regulatory lag and that, coupled with market volatility inflation and the potential for tariff effects on a lot of the goods and services we use during our construction projects means that tight management of controllable expenses remains a priority and it will be throughout the year. In addition to staying focused on the budget and execution of the capital plans, keeping the general rate case on focus and to avoid any major delays like we saw in 2021. I will say I’ve been generally pleased with the feedback we’ve been getting from the advocates, the commissioner’s office and the judge offices in terms of doing everything they can to keep the rate case on schedule, which I think is really good news. Looking at our growth strategy, the ongoing greenfield development that we have in Texas, it’s continued to develop very, very well and continued strong results. So we plan to stay focused in that South Austin corridor, which continues to grow. And we are also continuing to evaluate a number of domestic M&A opportunities. Although I just want to be clear, the main growth objective of California Water Service Group really is the rate base growth that Jim talked about earlier on the slide deck in that 11.7% compounded annual growth rate. So M&A is a supplemental growth process for us. Additionally, as we go into the warmer summer months, we want to maintain our best-in-class customer service and our water quality goals of no primary or secondary water quality violations. Obviously, we’ve got a lot of infrastructure investment to do over the remaining 9 months of 2025 especially coming out of a wet winter. As Jim referenced, we kept with the same pace that we had last year in the quarter on the capital investments, which we are very happy with, given the fact it was a very, very wet winter in California and that tends to slow us down on the construction management side. And of course, lastly, today being May 1, believe it or not, it is the official start of the fire season. So our teams are busy doing all the wildfire hardening projects that we do, clearing brush etcetera, getting all the equipment ready for the long drive summer months that lie ahead. So with that, overall, it was a very good quarter. We are very pleased with the results, financial results. Again, I will apologize that they are confusing. But again, that was nothing that the company can control. And again, I would just call your attention to the non-GAAP information that Jim provided in the deck to look at the quarters on a more normalized basis. And so Desire, with that, let’s open it up to questions, please.