Thank you, Richard. Second quarter adjusted EBITDA and adjusted earnings were $138 million and $78 million or $1.54 per share. Our Refining segment reported adjusted EBITDA of $108 million in the second quarter compared to a loss of $14 million in the first quarter. Starting in Hawaii, the Singapore 312 averaged $13.56 per barrel and our crude differential was $4.99, resulting in a Hawaii index of $8.57 per barrel. Hawaii margin capture was 119%, including a combined $4 million headwind from price lag and product crack hedging. Excluding these items, margin capture was 125%, reflecting favorable yield and reduced product imports, driven by record quarterly throughput rates. Looking ahead to the third quarter, we expect our Hawaii crude differential to land between $5.75 and $6.25 per barrel. In Montana, our index averaged $20.29 per barrel, margin capture was 110%, highlighting our ability to maintain strong clean product sales through strategic inventory drawdowns despite lower throughput rates during the turnaround. Looking ahead, our Montana indicator averaged $15.13 per barrel in July, supported by strong distillate margins across the Northern Rockies, offset by tighter heavy crude differentials. In Wyoming, our index averaged $21.41 per barrel, margin capture was 87%, impacted by the recent outage as we resumed full throughput rates in late April. Under FIFO accounting, we continue to expense high-cost purchased products into May, which reduced second quarter gross margin by approximately $8 million. Looking to the third quarter, we've returned to normal operations and expect OpEx to revert to prior run rate levels. Lastly, our Washington Index averaged $15.37 per barrel, an improvement of approximately $11 from the prior quarter, driven by tight distillate supplies in the P&W. Margin capture was 75%, below our guidance range of 85% to 95%, primarily due to higher sales mix of asphalt and intermediate products during the summer demand season. In July, our Washington indicator averaged $13.74 per barrel, remaining well supported by strong clean product margins. Turning to the Logistics segment. Second quarter adjusted EBITDA came in at $30 million, consistent with our mid-cycle run rate guidance. In Wyoming, Logistics volumes began to recover following the restart of the refinery in April, across the rest of our logistics system, we saw strong utilization on our pipelines and truck racks, supported by seasonal strength in sales volumes. In the Retail segment, we reported second quarter adjusted EBITDA of $23 million up from $19 million in the first quarter. The improvement was driven by higher fuel margins, same-store sales growth and lower operating costs. Corporate expenses and adjusted EBITDA totaled $24 million for the second quarter. We remain on track to achieve our company- wide cost reduction initiatives, targeting $30 million to $40 million in annual savings relative to last year. Excluding the Wyoming repair costs, year-to-date consolidated operating expenses were $412 million, reflecting a $24 million reduction compared to the prior year period. Moving to cash flows. Cash from operations during the second quarter totaled $83 million, excluding working capital inflows of $123 million and deferred turnaround expenditures of $72 million. We expect a partial reversal of the working capital inflow in the third quarter, primarily driven by the timing of derivative cash settlements, and return to typical accounts payable levels. Cash used in investing activities totaled $46 million, driven by capital expenditures. As Will noted, we expect CapEx to decline meaningfully during the second half of the year. Through June 30, accrued CapEx and turnaround costs totaled $173 million with our full year outlook turning toward the upper end of our guidance of $240 million. Turning to capital allocation. We repurchased $28 million or 1.6 million shares of common stock during the second quarter. Year-to- date, we bought back 5.2 million shares at an average price of $15, reducing our basic shares outstanding by 8%. Moving to the balance sheet. Gross term debt as of June 30 was $641 million or 3x our trailing 12-month retail and logistics EBITDA at the low end of our 3 to 4x leverage target. With a record LTM EBITDA of $211 million, our growing retail and logistics cash flow comfortably supports our leverage profile. Total liquidity increased 23% during the second quarter to $647 million, supported by strong operating cash flows and expanding capacity under our ABL facility. Our solid financial position, combined with an improved market backdrop positions us well to advance our strategic priorities moving forward. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, we'll turn it back to you for Q&A.