Thank you, Nick, and good morning everyone. Thank you for joining us. Portland General Electric is on track in 2024, and the stage is set for steady, normalized growth. After tough weather and extensive customer restoration in January, our results this quarter speak to strong execution. Beginning with slide four, I'll speak to our financial results and key drivers. For the first quarter, we reported GAAP net income of $109 million or $1.8 per diluted share. On a non-GAAP basis, net income was $123 million or $1.21 per diluted share. This compares with first quarter 2023 GAAP net income of $74 million or $0.80 per diluted share. First quarter 2024 GAAP results excluded the 20% non-recoverable cost of the reliability contingency event incurred in the January storm event. Results this quarter, which Joe will discuss in his remarks, were driven by robust low growth from semiconductor and data center customers and our focus on operational execution. This focus was evident throughout the quarter and no more so than during the January storms. Our PGE team members navigated regional resource constraints, gas network disruptions, severe winter conditions that resulted in hundreds of thousands of customer outages. I'd like to again commend and thank my colleagues for their extraordinary work during this challenging event. As we look ahead to the balance of the year and beyond, we remain focused on three main areas. First, rapid transformation of our energy systems propelled by continued investments in our service territory by semiconductor and digital infrastructure customers. Second, executing our capital plan to meet customers' priorities for clean energy and increased grid resilience, and third, delivering on our ongoing commitment to operational discipline by reducing risk, controlling cost, driving efficiency and managing customer affordability. This is a period of rapid growth and transformation for both our energy system and our region. The robust growth of the semiconductor and digital sectors will enable system-wide infrastructure and reliability investments and will continue to engage our customers, regulators and other stakeholders to ensure that this growth benefits all customers, industrial, commercial and residential alike. We continue to see significant residential transformation in our region as well, with strong growth of rooftop solar and electric vehicle adoption. Together, these changes are requiring us to think differently and innovate as we build and upgrade transmission and energy infrastructure on a scale reminiscent of what our industry first electrified the west. Moving to slide five, industrial growth. First, industrial load growth increased 4.9% compared to the first quarter last year. State and federal investments are bolstering semiconductor expansion in our service area. This quarter, Intel announced investments across four states, backed by $8.5 billion in federal funding. Intel expects that $36 billion will be spent in Hillsboro, Oregon, in the western part of our service territory. This is in addition to the significant semiconductor investments by analog devices, microchip and many others. This will drive economic growth for years to come, hoping to cement Oregon's Silicon Forest as the premier hub for semiconductor manufacturing, research and development. These investments will have broad benefits across our region, strengthening our communities, creating jobs, providing workforce development and higher education opportunities. Moreover, Oregon continues to reinforce its position as a hub for the digital infrastructure that underpins our global economic growth fueled by generative AI. A recent study by Cushman & Wakefield ranked Oregon as the fifth largest data center market nationally and eight globally. With this mature digital ecosystem in our area, we've been fortunate to enable growth, observe emerging trends and plan accordingly. Last year, as part of our combined clean energy and integrated resource plan, we increased our expectations for industrial energy usage in our service territory by over 40%, anticipating the rapid growth that we are seeing today. Additionally, these plans emphasize the need for expanded transmission investments, which we highlighted in our recent capital plan update. As industry continues to reshore and expand, we recognize the importance of electric infrastructure, clean energy supply and reflecting our region's focus on sustainability, economic security and transformative opportunities for our next generation. Capital plan execution, the ambition and clean energy goals of our customers underscore the importance of Portland General Electric's commitment to transform our energy systems, to pursue clean energy resources and expand transmission and invest in grid resilience. These investments not only position us for long-term growth, but also create significant benefits for all customers. Our generation, battery storage and grid infrastructure projects are great examples. The forthcoming, constable and seaside battery storage projects will play a critical role in matching variable renewable production with customer demand. The flexibility these batteries provide will allow us to navigate increasingly frequent and costly periods of power cost volatility. Similarly, the clear water development that came online in January has allowed PGE to generate more wind energy than ever before and will lead to customer price reduction while providing important geographic resource diversity. We're also continuing to modernize and harden our grid to accommodate emerging technology and to improve resilience in the face of severe winter and summer weather. These investments on behalf of customers from battery storage to grid modernization and resiliency projects are at the center of our 2025 general rate case filed in February, which Joe will touch on shortly. Operational discipline. As we advance critical investments to strengthen our system, affordability remains squarely in focus. This means finding opportunities to drive efficiencies and savings through power cost management and operational discipline. In March, PGE announced plans to join other Western utilities in the CAISO extended Day-Ahead market. EDAM offers us a larger operational footprint that will enhance reliability and help alleviate power cost pressure. On the operational front, PGE teams are deploying technology to prioritize work, optimize business processes, and focus on key risks like cybersecurity and wildfire mitigation. For example, as we progress through our year-round wildfire program, we're enhancing our vegetation management and investing in system hardening, situational awareness, and operational practices. This includes AI equipped cameras, weather stations, reclosers, fire mesh pole wrap, and early fall detection. As we look ahead, we have a solid first quarter and we are focused on execution and delivering on expectations. Our plans are exciting, achievable, and we're going to get it done. With that, I'll turn it over to Joe, who will walk us through our financial results in more detail. Thank you.