Thanks Lisa. Hi everybody. Let's start on Slide 9, which has a reconciliation of the third quarter's results compared to last year's third quarter. Customer growth of 2.3% increased operating income by $4.6 million. Our residential customer growth rate remains strong at 2.4% over that time period, which is slightly up from a quarter ago. Usage per customer decreased operating income by about $17 million in the third quarter compared with the third quarter of last year. Higher precipitation and more moderate temperatures led irrigation customers to use less energy to operate their pump and it causes residential and commercial customers to use less energy per customer for cooling. The impact of the decrease in sales volumes per customer was partially offset by revenue from the fixed cost adjustment decoupling mechanism for residential and small commercial customers. Transmission wheeling-related revenues decreased comparative operating income by $2.8 million, mainly due to less volatile energy prices in the Western US, which reduced transmission system demand and revenues. At the same time that reduced volatility helped with power supply costs further down on the table. O&M expenses were lower due to our ongoing focus on operating efficiently and a couple of other things. One was the impact of lower expenses from scheduled cyclical plant maintenance with last year having an atypically high amount of that maintenance. The other was the timing of regulatory deferrals. Equally offsetting the O&M savings was depreciation expense, which increased by $4.9 million over last year's third quarter. This isn't surprising given our infrastructure work and the resulting increase in plant and service and we expect that to continue at an elevated rate with our increased CapEx going forward. Other changes in operating revenues and expenses increased operating income by $5.3 million, primarily due to lower property taxes and a decrease in net power supply expenses that were not deferred for future recovery in rates through power cost adjustment mechanisms. Lower wholesale power purchase volumes and prices decreased net power supply expenses compared with the third quarter of last year. Non-operating expense increased slightly on a net basis. The allowance for funds used during construction increased as the average construction work in progress balance was higher. Also interest income increased due to higher interest rates on our cash and investments. These increases were partially offset by higher interest expense on long-term debt. Finally, we didn't report any additional amortization of accumulated deferred investment tax credits in the third quarter and is based on our current expectation for the full year. As a reminder we have a regulatory mechanism that allows us to use a portion of Idaho Power's tax credit balance to help lift Idaho Power's earnings up to a 9.4% return on year-end book equity in the Idaho jurisdiction. At the end of the second quarter, we recorded $7.5 million of additional ADITCs. And as Amy mentioned we now expect to use up to $10 million for the full year. So we didn't report any additional tax credit amortization in the third quarter. We already added on the books. Combined with nominal impacts from other IDACORP subsidiaries, we saw a $1.1 million decrease in net income over last year's third quarter. But for the year-to-date, we saw a $13 million increase in net income over the first nine months of last year. I don't know if ours move closer to the company's target debt-to-equity ratio compared to where we were at the year-end. As I've mentioned before, our goal is to maintain our current stable credit ratings as well as a capital structure in nearer 50% or 51% equity all in the face of our CapEx plans over the coming years. And to do that, we're still planning to blend debt and equity issuances. We don't have any sizable maturities to address in the next few years, which helps on the debt side and also with our credit ratings. Also our September debt issuance enhanced our cash position for the near-term and our rate settlement if approved would help with cash flows. And that increases our flexibility and our ability to act opportunistically on our equity issuance timing and approach. Turning to slide 10. Cash flow from operations improved after starting the year seeing the effects of regulatory lag from abnormally high power and fuel cost. As we discussed on the last call starting on June 1st, we received approval from the Idaho Commission to collect a $200 million increase in power supply costs from customers. Those are for higher power and gas costs over the past year with collection from June one of this year through May of 2025. That rate change has helped improve cash flows from operations as has moderation in power supply cost volatility as the year has gone on. Again, the rate changes from the Idaho rate case settlement assuming it's approved would also benefit cash flows. Looking back at September, IDACORP's Board of Directors approved a roughly 5% increase in the quarterly cash dividend on IDACORP's common stock from $0.79 to $0.83 per share. They've approved a 177% increase in quarterly dividend over the last 12 years. I think that's reflective of our company's commitment to its owners, while at the same time we've maintained some of the lowest energy prices in the nation for our customers. As Lisa mentioned relating to our Idaho general rate case filing, parties in the case have agreed to a settlement of all issues. If you joined us late, our summary of the pending settlement is on Slide 6. The stipulation provides for an increase in annual retail revenues of $54.7 million, effective this upcoming January 1. That's net of some transfers of cost recovery of base rates including $168.3 million from current PCA rates and $3.5 million from the energy efficiency writer. The settlement includes an ROE of 9.6%, which would set our overall rate of return at around 7.247%, with an unspecified capital structure cost of debt. The vast majority of the additional reduction from our original ask is regulatory lag. So not capital disallowances, but instead delayed collection that results from Idaho's use of a historic test year, with only certain known and measurable adjustments including using a 13-month average on rate base and our retrospective look at labor costs. A part of it is also moving certain items to mechanisms like riders and deferrals for certain costs. That lag in collection given our CapEx outlook is, what will likely put us in front of the commission with another general rate case or another form of rate request potentially as soon as 2024. There's no stay off provision in the settlement so it can accommodate an upcoming requests. One important attribute to the settlement that I want to highlight pertains to the ADITC mechanism. The sharing line for the mechanism will now be at 9.6%, and the ADITC usage mark will be reset to 95% of that which is a 9.12% return on year-end equity in the Idaho jurisdiction. Under the settlement the investment tax credits generated by the batteries, we're installing in 2023 would be added to the existing mechanism that's probably around $50 million in new ITCs added to the mechanism. As we contemplated in our original filing, a portion of those credits are intended to cover the revenue requirement for those batteries as a rate mitigation measure. Then under the settlement, which is a notable change from our original application, the mechanism would no longer have a cap on the amount of credits that Idaho Power could use in any particular year, for the current cap of $25 million of additional ADITCs per year would be removed. This is to accommodate the battery storage revenue requirement and also that help provide stability to earnings as we continue our elevated CapEx and work through the regulatory cycle to recover on that CapEx, all while feeling the effects of higher depreciation and financing costs and the regulatory lag introduced by the historic test year. We view the ADITC mechanism component as a particularly constructive outcome from the settlement. The settlement also has a rate design element to it where the residential service charge will increase from $5 to $15 per month over two years. And the small general service charge will increase from $5 to $25 per month on January 1. This change helps with a more timely and actable recovery of our fixed costs. The settlement went to the commission earlier this week during a scheduled decision meeting to reset the case schedule. The next steps in the process include, testimony from the parties in the middle of this month, with the opportunity to reply if necessary. Additionally, the commission scheduled customer and technical hearings for the last week of this month. We still expect the case will conclude by the end of this year and new rates would be effective January 1 2024. Slide 11, shows our updated full year earnings guidance and key operating metrics. As Amy noted, we expect IDACORP's earnings this year to be in the range of $5.05 to $5.15 per diluted share, with the assumption that Idaho Power will use up to $10 million of additional investment tax credit amortization, that's down from our estimate of $15 million last quarter. We expect results in the final quarter of the year to benefit from continuing customer growth, O&M expense management and hopefully a sustained moderation in power supply costs. On the other hand, as I alluded to earlier, we expect higher interest and depreciation expense to continue through the end of the year from our CapEx investments and plan going into service. We could also see potentially lower transmission wheeling-related revenues compared to the fourth quarter of last year when we saw the Western energy markets, with some abnormal volatility. We continue to expect full year O&M expense to be in the range of $385 million to $395 million with much of the expected savings related to less scheduled plant maintenance compared to last year and our typical cost management efforts. We're on track with our lower O&M thus far this year. We expect this year's CapEx spending to be slightly higher than our initial expectations. So we've increased our estimate by $25 million to a range of $675 million to $725 million. And then looking past this year, we'll give a longer-term CapEx forecast update on the fourth quarter call in February. But our current CapEx budget for 2024 is trending higher than we anticipated in February this year, and we're expecting it to be in the range of $850 million to $950 million as of now, which is up from our earlier estimate of $800 million to $850 million. We think that theme of higher CapEx will continue in subsequent years as we address growth in our service area. We're currently estimating that our CapEx for 2025 through 2027 will land in the range of $2 billion to $2.5 billion over that three-year period, which is a pretty significant increase from what we included in our estimate last quarter, which was $1.5 billion to $1.7 billion for that thee-year period. Currently our estimates don't include the upcoming RFP results for 2026 and 2027. So any owned resources coming out of those RFPs would be incremental to the amounts I mentioned. We'll continue to refine our plans and budgets during the fourth quarter and into early next year and plan to provide an update on our Q4 earnings call, which is our usual cadence. Finally, given our most recent forecast of hydropower operating conditions, we've tightened our hydro range as we move further into the final quarter of the year. So that's a lot and I'll stop there and we're happy to address questions you might have.