Good morning and thank you for joining us today. The first quarter saw a continuation of the advancements we have made over the last several quarters in all key aspects of our business. As we sit here today, occupancy is at 99.8% and we have the greatest level of visibility into re-leasing since our inception. Our re-leasing momentum from last year has continued into 2025. In addition to agreeing to new rents for the 2025 expirations, we also recently agreed to new rents for the 2026 expirations and are turning our attention with the Postal Service to 2027 re-leasing. The high level of visibility we have into our internal growth has resulted from a multi-tiered programmatic approach with the Postal Service, which I have discussed with you on our last few calls. Importantly, the program leads not only to more efficient and timely re-leasing, but also has resulted in inclusion of 3% annual escalators and 10-year leases. This new approach drives greater efficiency for both us and the postal Service. Within our organization, this process has allowed internal resources to expand into other value-added areas such as automation in our acquisitions and operations. We have been working diligently with the postal service that fully executed leases in hand prior to upcoming expirations and are fully up to date for 2025 leases. As a result, we provided annual AFFO guidance last quarter and we remain on track to achieve $1.20 to $1.22 per share. On the acquisition front, our $16 million acquired in Q1 is consistent with our historical cadence and Q2 is off to a good start with $13 million acquired subsequent to quarter end, an additional $22 million under definitive contracts. We continue to anticipate acquisition volume for the year of $80 million to $90 million at or above our targeted 7.5% weighted average going in cap rate. Our faith in our tenancy, business execution and our ability to drive internal growth through executing new leases and more efficient management of acquired postal assets gives us confidence to continue pursuing attractive deals as they arise. Given our blended cost of capital, our targeted acquisitions make sense today and become even more accretive over time as illustrated in our strong same-store cash NOI results and forward guidance of 4% to 6% for 2025. We are encouraged by our active dialogue with owners and the growth in our acquisition pipeline. We are confident that we have the systems and people in place to ramp up acquisitions in the event that our cost of capital and opportunity set are aligned. One of the reasons sellers transact with Postal Realty is our upreach structure, which provides the ability to transact with operating partnership units in lieu of cash. In addition to the potential tax benefits, sellers are choosing to invest in our platform of diversified postal assets. This past quarter, we acquired additional properties from one of the larger postal owners in exchange for units and we have a definitive agreement in place to acquire the remainder of their portfolio as well. They are one of the many owners that have taken OP units over the years. 11% of acquisitions since IPO have been completed with these units and the medium of exchange creates deal flow for many others even if we elect to instead close with cash. It is also a factor that contributes to approximately 75% of our acquisitions being sourced for off-market. Especially in periods of uncertainty, whether exchanging property for OP units or cash, it is becoming increasingly apparent to sellers, both large and small, that the gap between our platform and their go-it-alone plan has materially widened. Postal Realty’s unmatched ability to operate and administer properties, including an efficient re-leasing process, improves our results as we continue to innovate and drive efficiencies as we scale the business. We have been in active dialogue with members of Congress, including recent meetings with Congressman Pete Sessions, Co-Chair of DOGE Caucus and recently attending presentations by other congressional leaders at the Annual Association of United States Postal Lessors Conference in Washington, D.C. While there have been no updates on the DOGE DSA engagement to share, their resounding bipartisan support of the Postal Service real estate network and the acknowledgment of the critical nature of it to their constituents was very encouraging. As a reminder, lease expenses represent only 1.5% of the Postal Service's total operating budget and these facilities are the backbone of their delivery network, enabling them to serve 169 million delivery points across the country. We remain confident in the value of our properties to the Postal Services mission, the security and visibility of our cash flows and our ability to generate strong internal growth while continuing to consolidate this highly-fragmented market. I will now turn the call over to Jeremy.