Thanks, Rob, and good morning, everyone. My comments today will primarily be focused on sequential results comparing the first quarter of 2023 to the fourth quarter of 2022, unless otherwise stated. Total sales for the first quarter were $885 million, a 2% sequential increase, outperforming our original expectations. From a sector perspective, I will begin with our gas utilities and diet sectors, which make up approximately two thirds of our revenue and represent our more resilient, less cyclical business lines. Gas utility sales were $307 million in the first quarter, a $12 million or 4% decrease due to the timing of deliveries and projects in the U.S. Compared to the same quarter last year, the gas utility sector grew 13% on strong activity levels associated with safety-related modernization, emission reduction programs and continued infrastructure improvement projects. The DIET sector first quarter revenue was $278 million, a sequential increase of $30 million or 12%, driven by LNG projects, along with increased turnaround and maintenance spending for refining, chemicals and mining customers. This sector delivered 23% growth in the first quarter of 2023 over the same quarter a year ago, again, on the strength of LNG project work along with refining and chemical customer turnaround and maintenance projects. The PTI sector revenue for the first quarter was $300 million, a modest decrease of $2 million or 1% sequentially. In the U.S., our customer base, which includes the larger public E&P operators, we're very active with completions activity in the Permian Basin, but offset by the timing of lower gathering and processing projects this quarter. We also saw the backlog for PTI, including gathering and processing projects increased by 10% since year-end. From a geographic segment perspective, U.S. revenue was $740 million in the first quarter, a $20 million increase from the previous quarter, driven by the DIET sector, which was up $28 million or 15%. Canada revenue was $42 million in the first quarter, sequentially down $4 million or 9% due to the timing of certain pipe orders. International revenue was $103 million in the first quarter, unchanged from the previous quarter. However, the international backlog is up 16% since year end. Now turning to margins. Adjusted gross profit for the first quarter was $188 million or 21.2% in line with the fourth quarter. Although we have seen deflation in our line pipe business, we have been successful offsetting this headwind with other products such as BAMI [ph] that are accretive to overall company margins. We continue to target average gross margins of 21% for 2023, a step change from our historical averages. Reported SG&A for the first quarter was $122 million or 13.8% of sales as compared to $123 million or 14.2% for the fourth quarter of 2022. The 40 basis point improvement this quarter was a function of our strong cost control initiatives and higher quarterly revenue. For the full year SG&A, we continue to expect the average percentage of sales to be in the mid 13% range. As our revenue trends higher throughout the year, we expect to see the cost as a percent of revenue gradually declining. EBITDA for the first quarter was $69 million or 7.8% of sales, a 20 basis point improvement over the fourth quarter of 2022 and a 130 basis point improvement over the same quarter a year ago, evidence of the improved efficiencies that we achieved over the last few years driving more incremental revenue to the bottom line. Tax expense in the first quarter was $13 million with an effective tax rate of 28% as compared to $12 million of expense in the fourth quarter 2022. The difference in the effective rate and the statutory rate is due to state income taxes, non-deductible expenses and differing foreign income tax rates. For the first quarter, we had net income attributable to common stockholders of $28 million or $0.33 per diluted share, and our adjusted net income attributable to common stockholders on an average cost basis, normalizing for LIFO income was $27 million or $0.32 per diluted share. In the first quarter, we consumed $30 million in cash from operations, which is normal course of business for us as we tend to ramp up our inventory purchases earlier in the year in preparation for the seasonal highs that we typically experience in the second and third quarters. We expect to generate cash in each of the remaining quarters of the year, ultimately achieving our 2023 goal to generate operating cash of $120 million or more. Additionally, we typically generate more cash in the second half of the year. And as we previously mentioned, generating cash consistently each year going forward in both years of growth and decline is a key initiative for the company. Working capital as a percent of sales was 17.9% in the first quarter, up from 16.2% in the fourth quarter of 2022, primarily due to the higher inventory build this quarter. This percentage is expected to gradually decline each quarter going forward due to a combination of reduced inventory and increased revenue. Our total debt outstanding at the end of the quarter was $390 million, and our leverage ratio based on net debt of $351 million was 1.2 times, which is in line with the record we set last quarter and a considerable improvement over the same quarter in the prior year when our leverage ratio was 1.6 times. Our availability under our ABL facility was $601 million, and we had $39 million of cash for a total liquidity position of $640 million at the end of the first quarter. This is nearly a $100 million increase in liquidity compared to first quarter of last year. And as Rob mentioned, we continue to expect to have plenty of capacity under our ABL for use, if needed, to address the upcoming maturity of our Term Loan B in 2024, if we are unable to come to a resolution with our preferred stockholder. To finish off our 2023 outlook, as Rob mentioned earlier, our solid first quarter results provide us with confidence in our 2023 outlook. We continue to target a double-digit percentage revenue increase and expect to surpass the 8% hurdle for EBITDA margins. From a sector revenue perspective, we expect the PTI segment to increase the most in the mid-teens percentage range, followed by DIET with an increase in the low double digits. And finally, gas utilities to increase in the high upper single digits. From a geographic view, this translates to a low double-digit percentage improvement in each of our segments. Our normalized effective tax rate for the year is projected to be 26% to 28%, but could fluctuate from quarter-to-quarter due to discrete items. And from a cash perspective, as activity levels continue to improve and our inventory levels decline from current levels, it is expected to translate into meaningful cash generation for the remainder of the year with $120 million or more in cash flow from operations. And as mentioned earlier, we expect a higher percentage of this cash flow to materialize in the second half of the year. Excess cash will continue to be prioritized in the near term towards further strengthening the balance sheet and growth of the business. Regarding our capital expenditures, we expect those to be in line with historical averages in the $10 million to $15 million range. And finally, as we look at the cadence of revenue throughout the year, we expect the second quarter to increase sequentially in the low single digits, driven by our gas utility business with continued growth in the third quarter before our normal seasonal decline in the fourth quarter. And with that, I would like to turn it back to Rob for closing comments.