Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone. I'll begin with safety on Slide 5. Through September, our OSHA recordable rate was 0.28%, continuing the positive trend from the last 3 years. Continuing to reduce workplace injuries is one way we can honor the memory of our colleague, Ryan Barwick, who we lost in an accident earlier this year. We must continue to focus relentlessly on improving our safety performance. Now I'll turn to updates around the execution of our growth plan. I'll start with the Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind project. Slide 6 highlights what makes CVOW such an important and unique generation resource. The project is now 2/3 complete, and just a few months away from delivering much-needed electricity to our customers. Slide 7 shows our major equipment progress. We successfully completed 100% of monopile installation 1 month prior to the conclusion of the piling season. very pleased with this tremendous milestone for the project. We've installed 63 transition pieces to date with all 176 transition pieces now fabricated. Turbine fabrication remains on schedule. Earlier this week, we installed the second offshore substation jacket and will place the accompanying topside shortly. The third and final offshore substation is nearly complete and will be installed in the first quarter of next year. Turning to timing on Slide 10. We now expect first turbine installation to occur late next month and continue to expect first power to be delivered to our customers in late first quarter of next year, approximately 5 months from now. As a reminder, we'll be energizing strings of turbines throughout 2026. No change to our current expectation of project completion by the end of '26. But given delays with Charybdis, we have significantly reduced the schedules weather and vessel maintenance contingency, which could push a few of the final turbines into early 2027. We'll continue to refine and update this assumption as we observe actual turbine installation cadence similar to what occurred with monopiles, which went more quickly than expected. Project costs now stands at $11.2 billion, which includes unused contingency of $206 million, down about $15 million from last quarter. Excluding tariff impacts, costs for project components have remained in line with the prior update. The updated cost this quarter reflect the accelerated recognition of steel tariffs through the end of 2026, whereas we were previously recognizing all tariff costs on a quarter-by-quarter basis. Through September, the project has invested approximately $8.2 billion. The remaining project costs attributable to Dominion are expected to be approximately $1.5 billion. On Slide 11, we've continued to provide an update to our potential tariff exposure across discrete tariff categories and illustrative duration. We're showing the impact of country-specific tariffs through project construction at the end of 2026. Please note that changes to tariff policy could impact these estimates. Unfixed costs include project management costs, fuel for vessels and changes to tariffs and network upgrades, if any. Estimated network upgrade costs assigned by PJM to CVOW in the most recent decision point came down modestly. We expect this inaugural process to conclude by year-end and do not expect a material change to network upgrade costs. We'll then execute and submit our generator interconnection agreement at PJM and FERC under the very standard finalization protocol, as is in place for all new generating sources. We expect the process to conclude in March, which will be the final step to First Power. As a result of this project cost increase, we recorded a modest charge this quarter, about $50 million after tax included on Schedule 2 for costs not expected to be recovered from customers in accordance with the cost sharing settlement with Virginia regulators, and our 50% cost sharing partnership agreement with Stonepeak. These cost and risk-sharing arrangements continue to work as intended to protect customers and shareholders. Further on costs, we'll file with our quarterly status report and our 2026 CVOW rider filing with the State Corporation Commission today. As shown on Slide 12, the project's LCOE has been updated to $84 up from last quarter, driven primarily by lower forecasted rec prices. Keep in mind that REC sales are credited against the levelized cost of energy as value delivered to customers and the value of REC will change year-to-year based on market dynamics at the time. However, importantly, the LCOE compares favorably to other generation resources and is well below the statutory amount. It's also in line with the LCOE range provided at the time of the original filing in November 2021. The project is now forecasted to represent an average residential customer monthly bill credit of $0.63 over the life of the project. Under the rider proposal filed today, we're forecasting a revenue requirement for the 2026 rate year, which begins in September '26 of $665 million. This customer beneficial real-time cash recovery provides important financial support for this regulated investment during construction. If approved, the rider proposal filed today would result in residential customers seeing a decline in their monthly bill in September, as the project begins to generate electricity in early 2026. Progress on CVOW continues to go very well, and there's every reason for our customers and policymakers to be excited by the timely delivery of much-needed low-cost electricity from this critical generating resource. Let me pivot to discuss Charybdis, our American Made Jones Act-compliant wind turbine installation vessel which has been a challenge. I'm extremely disappointed that Charybdis has again not met expectations. I recognize the importance of executing consistently against any commitment, and we failed to deliver regarding Charybdis. We built Charybdis to derisk our installation process. We continue to believe that it will represent a strategic advantage, providing enhanced schedule certainty, which ultimately translates into cost certainty. The vessel successfully completed sea trials received sign-offs and arrived in Portsmouth, Virginia in September. Upon arrival, Siemens Gamesa successfully completed all necessary modifications for turbine handling and installation. Simultaneously punch list items were identified that require remediation prior to the vessel being cleared to begin turbine load-out and installation. While all major systems are operating well, there are a variety of quality assurance level items that require addressing and those tasks are currently underway to ensure that the vessel can commence work as quickly as it is safely able to do so. It's become clear that while the ship's design and construction methods are consistent with global best practices, we didn't properly account in our timing estimate for the risk inherent in being the first Jones Act-compliant wind turbine installation vessel to be built and regulated in the United States. The vessel is expected to be cleared to load and install turbines in November. As a reminder, unlike monopile installations, there are no time of year or time of day restrictions on installing turbines. Finally, any modest delay beyond November won't impact first power timing in late first quarter of 2026. One final note on Charybdis. Project costs continue to be approximately $715 million. Moving now to data centers on Slide 14. We continue to see robust demand from data centers. We now have approximately 47 gigawatts in various stages of contracting as of September 2025, which compares to around 40 gigawatts as of December 2024, an increase of 7 gigawatts or 17%. As a reminder, these contracts are broken into substation engineering letters of authorization, construction letters of authorization and electrical service agreements. As customers move from the first to the last, the cost commitment and obligation by the customer increase. We're currently studying over 28 gigawatts of data center demand within the substation engineering letters of authorization stage, which means the customer has requested the company to begin the necessary engineering review for new infrastructure required for service. This compares to approximately 26 gigawatts as of December 2024 and represents a roughly 7% increase. There are also now about 9 gigawatts of data center demand that have executed construction letters of authorization which are contracts that enable construction of the required distribution and substation electric infrastructure to begin. This compares to just over 5 gigawatts in December 2024 and represents an approximately 73% increase. Should a customer in this stage, elect to discontinue a project, they're obligated to reimburse the company for its investment to date. Finally, we now have nearly 10 gigawatts in electric service agreements or ESA, representing contracts for electric service between Dominion Energy and a customer. This has increased by nearly a gigawatt or 12% since December 2024 as well. By signing an ESA, the customer is committing to consume a certain level of electricity annually often with ramp schedules where the contracted usage grows over time. We welcome these customers to our system and recognize the vital contribution data centers make to national state and community success. We're developing resources across distribution, transmission and generation to ensure we meet this critical need on a timely basis, while also taking active steps to safeguard all of our customers from the risk of paying more than their fair share for reliable and affordable electric service. Data center demand should and can be a win-win for our state, our customers and our company. Turning to Slide 15, let me share a few additional business updates. First, on the biannual review proceeding and the proposed large load tariff, post-hearing briefs were filed last week. We anticipate a final order by the end of November. Next, on the transmission side. We submitted project proposals in the latest PJM open window process that closed in August. This year's reliability open window represents the largest proposed investment by Dominion Energy since PJM began its open window process. While final project selections by PJM won't be made until Q1 2026, there is a robust need for new transmission across the region, and we expect this open window to reflect that. Recall that in last year's open window, Dominion was awarded around 100 projects totaling nearly $3 billion. On the generation front, we've announced a number of updates in recent weeks. SCC hearings for the Chesterfield Energy Reliability Center, an approximately 1 gigawatt natural gas-fired electric generating facility concluded in September, and post-hearing briefs were filed this week in line with previous testimony. We expect an order in December. On October 15, we filed our next set of utility scale solar and storage projects with the SEC, representing about $2.9 billion of new investment. The filing included approximately 845 megawatts of utility scale solar and 155 megawatts of storage projects, which will further derisk our growth program. Also on October 15, we filed our 2025 Virginia Integrated Resource Plan, which presented several possible generation build portfolios with additional resource capacity across both renewable and dispatchable generation technologies in response to continued robust load growth in our service territory. The IRP update demonstrates a continuation of our focus on an all-of-the-above approach to ensuring reliability, affordability and increasingly clean generation. On customer affordability, as shown on Slide 16, our current residential electric rates at DEV and DESC are 9% and 11% below the U.S. average, respectively. And based on the build plans proposed in both states latest IRPs, both will maintain customer bill growth rates through the forecast periods below current electricity inflation levels. In conclusion, we've summarized key highlights from today's call on Slide 17. We realize how important it is to meet the commitments we provided at the conclusion of the business review. We are 100% execution focused. We will deliver for our customers, our employees and our shareholders. With that, we're ready to take your questions.