Thanks, Laura. Good morning, everyone and thank you for joining us today as we review our fourth quarter and annual 2024 results. In addition to Laura, on the line with me this morning, are George Wells, our Chief Operating Officer; Chris Kollme, our EVP of Investments; and Sherry Rexroad, our Chief Financial Officer. We also have the usual full complement of our management team available to answer your question. Before I get into Piedmont’s specific results, I’d like to take a moment and discuss the continuing improvement in the office market fundamentals and the near-term growth opportunities for our business. No doubt, the perception around office space turned the corner in 2024 with many major employers and Piedmont tenants such as Salesforce, Amazon, UPS, AT&T, and Starbucks, just to name a few, continuing to prescribe greater in-office attendance. We’ve witnessed this dynamic for companies, small and large, implementing our workforce strategy that utilizes office space to build corporate culture, foster collaboration, push the boundaries of creative thinking and to communicate most effectively. The need for well-located, amenitized and differentiated office space has never been more important for a company. And as a result, demand continues to grow for well-priced, high-quality, high-service operators and buildings, which is very much aligned with Piedmont’s strategy. And with virtually no new construction and supply growth at historic lows for the next 2 to 3 years, we believe the market for high-quality office space will tighten in 2025 and for the years following providing the backdrop for strong increases in rental rates across the portfolio, but particularly our Sunbelt markets. The fourth quarter witnessed positive, yet modest net absorption, according to JLL’s national office report. Levels not seen since 2021, with 3 of Piedmont’s markets, Dallas, Orlando, and New York, included in the list of those reflecting these positive trends. In addition, on a national basis, gross leasing volumes have improved each of the last three quarters, reaching post-pandemic highs with the fourth quarter coming in at 92% of pre-COVID averages. However, I note that this demand is more concentrated than ever at the top end of the market. As we’ve discussed before, 90% of the vacancy resides in the bottom 30% of the office stock. As a result, we are starting to see demand at the top of the market outpace supply. In addition, the uncertainty regarding tariffs and labor costs further validates Piedmont’s strategy of acquiring existing assets in desirable locations and bringing them up to today’s standards. And the recent announcements regarding the federal government’s rationalization of its office space should have limited to no impact on Piedmont. Given that the GSA represents approximately 0.5% of our annualized revenue. As we look back at what Piedmont accomplished in 2024, we achieved a number of our strategic goals, but our leasing success certainly tops the list. During 2024, we completed 2.4 million square feet of total leasing, the most leasing we’ve completed on an annual basis since 2015. And we grew cash basis same-story NOI by 2.6%, with both metrics well above our original projections and guidance for the year. Over a million square feet of our 2024 leasing was related to new tenant leases, resulting in absorption for our in-service portfolio and a year-end lease percentage of 88.4%. Additionally, the leases we executed during 2024 reflected very strong rental rate growth, approximately 12% on a cash basis and almost 20% on an accrual basis. The strongest growth we’ve experienced in the past 5 years on an accrual basis and in over a decade on a cash basis. During 2024, we also saw incremental liquidity coming into the office sector. National office transactional activity, albeit still at historic lows, started to improve, up 29% year-over-year. We were able to capitalize on this uptick to accomplish another 2024 strategic goal by disposing of two properties which generated approximately $77 million of gross proceeds. As office fundamentals continue to improve, debt financing is becoming more readily available and spreads continue to tighten for high-quality assets. As Chris will touch on in his remarks, this bolsters our expectations to dispose of select non-core and mature assets in 2025. As expected, our refinancing activity continued in full force and was a top strategic goal for 2024. The team did an outstanding job to complete a $400 million bond offering in June at a significantly improved credit spread compared to our 2023 offering. And just this week, we completed some additional transactions that Sherry will go into in more detail about in a moment. The headline being that we now have no debt with a final maturity until 2028. Finally, core FFO for the year was $1.49 per diluted share and reflected approximately $22 million or $0.17 per diluted share of increased net interest expense as compared to the previous year. Additionally, our 2024 results reflected the sale of 2 properties and the downtime between the expiration of a few large leases during the year before newly executed leases commenced late in 2024 or will commence in 2025. No doubt there is still work left to do, and Georgia will provide market specifics and details on the leasing pipeline in a moment, but we continue to believe that the investments we’ve made in our portfolio, combined with our relentless focus on best-in-class service and a sustainability mindset are resonating with the market, clients and the brokerage community. And the demand for highly amenitized, well-located work environments operated by a financially stable landlord will continue to grow throughout 2025. We believe our portfolio is well-positioned to capture more than our market share of customer demand and we will be able to continue to drive leasing percentage and rental rate growth this year. 2025 contractual expirations are very manageable, with roughly half already filled or close to being backfilled. We expect our backlog of approximately 1.4 million square feet, representing roughly $46 million of future annual cash flow, to benefit our financial results during the latter half of 2025 as those leases commence or reach the end of their abatement period. With that, I’ll now hand the call over to George, who will go into more details on fourth quarter operational results.