Thank you, David, and good morning, everyone. In the first quarter of 2024, Marine Transportation segment revenues were $475 million, and operating income was $83 million with an operating margin of 17.5%. Compared to the first quarter of 2023, total Marine revenues increased $63 million or 15% and operating income increased $40 million or 93%. Compared to the fourth quarter of 2023, total Marine revenues, Inland and Coastal together increased 5%, and operating income increased 22%. As David mentioned, fog and high winds along the Gulf Coast produced a 22% sequential increase in delay days and negatively impacted operations and efficiency, while planned shipyard activity and weather impacted the coastal business. These headwinds were offset by solid underlying customer demand, improved pricing and most importantly, execution. Looking at the Inland business in more detail. The Inland business contributed approximately 81% of segment revenue. Average barge utilization was in the low to mid-90% range for the quarter, which is slightly better than the utilization seen in the fourth quarter of 2023 and compassed similarly the first quarter of 2023. Long-term Inland Marine Transportation Contracts are those contracts with a term of 1 year or longer contributed approximately 65% of revenue with 62% from time charters and 38% from contracts of affreightment. Improved market conditions contributed to spot market rates increasing sequentially in the low to mid-single digits and in the 15% range year-over-year. Term contracts that renewed during the first quarter were up on average in the low double digits compared to the prior year. Compared to the first quarter of 2023, Inland revenues increased 14%, primarily due to higher term and spot contract pricing and fewer delay days. Inland revenues increased low to mid-single digits compared to the fourth quarter of 2023 despite unfavorable navigation and operating conditions. Inland operating margins improved by nearly 150 basis points, driven by the impact of higher pricing and continued cost management which helped save off lingering inflationary pressures. Now moving to the Coastal business. Coastal revenues increased 20% year-over-year due to higher contract prices and fewer shipyards. We had 1 large vessel concludes its planned shipyard and reenter service during the quarter. Overall, Coastal had an operating margin in the high single to low double-digit range, resulting from higher pricing and cost leverage. The Coastal business represented 19% of revenues for the Marine Transportation segment. Average Coastal barge utilization was in the mid- to high 90% range, which is in line with the first quarter of 2023. During the quarter, the percentage of Coastal revenue with under term contracts was approximately 96% of which approximately 98% were time charters. Average spot market rates were up in the low to mid-single digits sequentially and around 30% year-over-year. Renewals of term contracts were higher in the low 20% range on average year-over-year. With respect to our tank barge fleet for both the Inland and Coastal businesses, we have provided a reconciliation of the changes in the first quarter as well as projections for 2024. This is included in our earnings call presentation posted on our website. At the end of the first quarter, the Inland fleet had 1,078 barges representing 23.8 million barrels of capacity. On a net basis, with the newly acquired barges we announced today, we expect to end 2024 with a total of 1,094 Inland barges, representing 24.2 million barrels of capacity. Coastal Marine is expected to remain unchanged for the year. Now I'll review the performance of the D&S segment. Revenues for the first quarter of 2024 was $333 million with an operating income of $22 million and operating margin of 6.6%. Compared to the first quarter of 2023, the D&S segment saw revenue decreased by $5 million or 2% with operating income decreasing by approximately 3%. When compared to the fourth quarter of 2023, revenues decreased by $14 million or 4% and operating income decreased by $7 million or 23%. In Power Generation, revenues increased 50% year-over-year as we saw a pickup in orders from data centers and other industrial customers for Power Generation and backup power installation. We also continue to see steady deliveries of natural gas driven Power Generation equipment in the oil and gas space. Power Generation operating income was up 45% year-over-year and had operating margins in the high single digits. Power Generation represented 41% of total segment revenues. On the Commercial and Industrial side, steady activity in marine repair partially offset lower deliveries due to supply chain bottlenecks in our Thermo King business. As a result, Commercial and Industrial revenues were down 7% year-over-year. Operating income increased 11% year-over-year, driven by favorable product mix and ongoing cost saving initiatives. Commercial and Industrial made up 43% of segment revenues with operating margins in the high single digits. Compared to the fourth quarter of 2023, Commercial and Industrial revenues decreased by 13% as Thermo King supply chain constraints were partially offset by increased activity in marine repair. Operating income was up 28% over the same time period, driven by favorable product mix. In the Oil and Gas market, we continue to see softness in conventional frac-related equipment as lower rig counts tempered demand for new engines, transmissions and parts throughout the quarter. This softness is being partially offset by execution on backlog and new orders of e-frac equipment. Revenues in Oil and Gas were down 43% year-over-year and 38% sequentially. Oil and Gas represented 16% of segment revenue in the first quarter and had operating margins in the mid-single digits. Now turning to the balance sheet. As of March 31, we had $75 million of cash with total debt around $1 billion and our debt-to-cap ratio remained below 25%. During the quarter, we had net cash flow from operating activities of $123.3 million. First quarter cash flow from operations was impacted by a working capital build of approximately $30 million, driven by underlying growth in the business. We continue to target unwinding working capital as the year progresses. We used cash flow and cash on hand to fund $81 million of capital expenditures, or CapEx, primarily related to maintenance of equipment. During the quarter, we also used $41.8 million to repurchase stock at an average price just under $84. As of March 31, we had total available liquidity of approximately $491 million. For 2024, we are on track to generate cash flow from operations of $600 million to $700 million on higher revenues and EBITDA. We still see some supply chain constraints posing some headwinds to managing working capital in the near term. Having said that, we are targeting to unwind this working capital as orders shipped in 2024 and beyond. With respect to CapEx, we expect capital spending to range between $290 million and $330 million for the year. Approximately $190 million to $240 million is associated with Marine maintenance capital and improvements to existing Inland and Coastal Marine Equipment and facility improvements. Approximately $90 million is associated with growth capital spending in both of our businesses. The net result should provide approximately $300 million of free cash flow for the year. As always, we are committed to a balanced capital allocation approach and we'll use this cash flow to opportunistically return capital to shareholders and continue to pursue long-term value-creating investment and acquisition opportunities. I will now turn the call back to David to discuss the remainder of our outlook for 2024.