Thanks, Ryan. Now moving to slide four in a review of our first quarter results. As we review our results, please note that in our comments today and in the accompanying slides, we reference certain non-GAAP measures. We refer you to Slides 14 through 19 for a reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures to their corresponding GAAP measures. Now for the quarter. Revenue increased year over year to $1.142 billion an increase of 9.3%, organic revenue increased 2.5%. As we deployed gigabit wireline networks, wireless wireline converged networks and wireless networks, this quarter reflected an increase in demand from two of our top five customers. Gross margin was 19.3% of revenue an increased 95 basis points compared to the first quarter of fiscal 2024. General and administrative expenses were 8.3% of revenue and all of these factors produced adjusted EBITDA of $130.9 million or 11.5% of revenue and earnings per share of $2.12. Liquidity was solid at 573.6 million. Pro forma for our recently closed five-year extension to our senior credit facility, liquidity was $707 million. In May, we completed an acquisition that extends our geographic footprint to Alaska, and finally, during the quarter, we repurchased 210,000 shares of our common stock for $29.8 million. Now going to Slide 5. Today, major industry participants are constructing or upgrading significant wireline networks across broad sections of the country. These wireline networks are generally designed to provision gigabit network speeds to individual consumers and businesses either directly or wirelessly using 5G technologies. Industry participants have stated their belief that a single high-capacity fiber network can most cost-effectively deliver services to both consumers and businesses, enabling multiple revenue streams from a single investment. This view is increasing the appetite for fiber deployments, and we believe that the industry's efforts to deploy high-capacity fiber networks continues to meaningfully broaden the set of opportunities for our industry. We are encouraged that a number of our customers are pursuing strategic transactions, aim largely in part to increase access to capital and expand fiber deployment programs. Increasing access to high-capacity telecommunications continues to be crucial to society, especially for rural America. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act includes over $40 billion for the construction of rural communications networks in unserved and underserved areas across the country under the B program. This represents an unprecedented level of support and meaningfully increases the rural market that we expect will ultimately be addressed. All states and territories have submitted their initial B proposals. As of early this week, eight states and territories have completed all 10 required steps, while 45 others have completed nine of the 10. Once all 10 steps are completed, a state can request 20% or more of its allocated feed funding. To date, approximately $6 billion or 14% of the program total has received initial proposal approval. In addition, substantially, all states have commenced programs that will provide funding for telecommunications networks even prior to the initiation of funding under the Infrastructure Act. We're providing program management, planning, engineering, and design, aerial underground and wireless construction and fulfillment services for gigabit deployments. These services are being provided across the country in numerous geographic areas to multiple customers. These deployments include networks consisting entirely of wired network elements and converged wireless wireline multi-use networks. Fiber network deployment opportunities are increasing in rural America as new industry participants respond to emerging societal initiatives. We continue to provide integrated planning, engineering, and design, procurement and construction and maintenance services to several industry participants. Macroeconomic conditions appear stable. In addition, the market for labor has improved in many regions around the country. Automotive and equipment supply chains are also improving, although the supply of mid-duty chassis is still somewhat constrained. Prices for capital equipment continue to increase, but at a moderating rate. For several customers, we expect the pace of deployments to increase this year, including two significant customers whose capital expenditures were more heavily weighted toward the first half of calendar year 2023. Within this context, we remain confident that our scale and financial strength position as well to deliver valuable service to our customers. Moving to Slide 6. During the quarter, revenue increased 9.3%. Our top five customers combined produced 56.4% of revenue, which was essentially flat organically. Demand increase from two of our top five customers, all other customers increased 5.7% organically. AT&T was our largest customer at 18.9% of revenue, or $215.5 million. AT&T grew sequentially for the second consecutive quarter. Lumen was our second largest customer, 13.7% of total revenue or $156.8 million. Lumen grew organically 15%. This was our ninth consecutive quarter of organic growth with lumen. Revenue from Comcast was $105 million or 9.2% of revenue. Comcast was Dycom’s third largest customer. Charter was our fourth largest customer at $89.1 million or 7.8% of revenue. Charter grew 121.8% organically. And finally, Verizon was our fifth largest customer at $78.2 million or 6.8% of revenue. This is the 21st consecutive quarter where all of our other customers in aggregate, excluding the top five customers, have grown organically. Of note, fiber construction revenue from electric utilities was $96 million in the quarter. We have extended our geographic reach and expanded our program management network planning services. In fact, over the last several years, we believe we have meaningfully increased the long-term value of our maintenance and operations business. A trend which we believe will parallel our deployment of gigabit wireline direct and wireless wireline converge networks as those deployments dramatically increase the amount of outside plant network that must be extended and maintained. Now, going to Slide 7. Backlog at the end of the first quarter was $6.364 billion versus $6.917 billion at the end of the January, 2024 quarter, a decrease of $553 million. Of this backlog, approximately $3.863 billion is expected to be completed in the next 12 months. Backlog activity during the first quarter reflects solid performance as we book new work and renewed existing work. We continue to anticipate substantial future opportunities across a broad array of our customers. During the quarter, we received from Frontier a construction and maintenance agreement in Illinois, for Comcast, a construction agreement in Washington, various rural fiber construction agreements in Washington, Arizona, Tennessee, and Georgia, and various utility line locating agreements in California, Virginia, and Georgia. Head count was 15,689. Now I will turn the call over to Drew for his financial review and outlook.