Thanks, Laura. Good morning, everyone and thank you for joining us today as we review our first quarter 2025 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'll have the usual full accompanying of our management team available to answer your questions as well. We are very pleased with our solid start to 2025 completing approximately 363,000 square feet of total leasing during the quarter, with roughly half related to new tenant leases. The overall volume is especially encouraging given that the first quarter is typically the slowest quarter of any given year and the leases executed were spread throughout the portfolio, with almost every market executing at least one lease for 10,000 square feet or greater. Further, leases executed during the quarter reflected double-digit rental rate roll ups on both a cash and GAAP basis. And additionally, as we disclosed on last quarter's call, we completed our last bit of required refinancing activity during the first quarter, including paying off a $250 million term loan that was scheduled to mature in March and extending our $600 million line of credit. As for broader market commentary, the occupier market recovery appears to be continuing to progress as more national employers such as JP Morgan continue to change their mandate to five days a week, adding to a chorus of large office users like Amazon, realizing the benefits of more in office interaction. In many cases, these users have discovered they don't have enough space to accomplish this shift and are exploring expansion options, something we've seen in our own portfolio as George will touch on in a moment. Against the strengthening backdrop, however, macroeconomic uncertainty emerged during Q1, causing national gross leasing volume to slow moderately after reaching post-pandemic highs in late 2024. Net absorption turned negative again driven in large part by federal lease terminations mostly impacting DC Metro and albeit still reflecting a 60% improvement from the first quarter of 2024. Also a positive new development, deliveries on a quarterly basis fell to their lowest level in over a decade and groundbreaking continues to be scarce with less than 1 million square feet started during the first quarter. As we've seen in our operating markets, the lack of renovations from capital starved owners suffering from tenancy losses and debt related issues benefits well capitalized owners like Piedmont as the flight to quality intensifies. While these macro factors should continue to benefit Piedmont's ability to lease space, we're mindful of the current economic volatility and the uncertainty it brings. That said, and certainly bearing a recession, we believe we're on track to meet or exceed our 2025 goals. Over the past 18 months, Piedmont has leased over 3.6 million square feet, or approximately 24% of its operating portfolio, with an additional 1.1 million to 1.2 million square feet of leasing budgeted for the remainder of 2025. Leasing momentum remains strong, including over 275,000 square feet of leases signed during the month of April. We're experiencing increased demand for our buildings from full floor and larger tenancy, particularly in Dallas, Atlanta, in Minneapolis. As a result of our recent leasing success, our backlog at year-end of $46 million is now $67 million of annualized revenue that are from leases yet to commence or in their free rent period. Furthermore, because of the unprecedented level of leasing, the gap between lease percentage and economic lease percentage or cash paying tenancy is at its widest in over a decade at 10.6%. We expect Piedmont's leasing success to maintain its current momentum as our legal stage pipeline has faced minimal disruption despite broader economic uncertainties. If leasing activity continues as anticipated and Piedmont maintains its current dividend payment absent any dispositions which are difficult to forecast in this uncertain environment, the company would need to increase its leverage to fund this future growth. We believe that taking on additional leverage would not be prudent as it could impede long-term growth and constrain our liquidity and access to capital. Due to this unique period in our corporate life cycle where Piedmont is experiencing significant capital outlay to fund tenant improvements and leasing commissions, while simultaneously having a sizable percentage of our portfolio not paying cash rent, management and the Board have made the decision to suspend the dividend. This decision aims to fund accretive long-term growth and retain a larger portion of the company’s earnings to do so, which are our lowest cost of capital. Additionally, we can utilize any remaining retained earnings to reduce leverage on the balance sheet and enhance our debt metrics. Together, suspending the dividend and subsequent reduction in borrowings is expected to result in up to $0.01 of accretion in 2025. These actions will position Piedmont with a stronger balance sheet and a clearer path to earnings growth in 2026 when the leases in process commence. In summary, we believe the action to suspend the dividend will be accretive for shareholders in the medium and long-term as we deploy our retained earnings generating an average unleveraged return in excess of 25% on this invested leasing capital. Our capital is extremely precious resource that will be best used to fund growth by leasing our unique modernized hospitality infused properties and we’re experiencing record levels of tenant interest across both our operating and out-of-service portfolios. The market’s demand for our assets remains at record levels in terms of tours and proposal activity, including approximately 300,000 square feet of proposals in the legal stage for our out-of-service portfolio. I’ll now hand the call over to George who will go into more details on the leasing pipeline and first quarter operational results. George?