Thanks, Jerry, and good morning, everyone. The first quarter reflects continued strong execution by the Rollins team. A few highlights to start: growth was robust to start the year. We delivered revenue growth of 9.9% year-over-year. Organic growth was 7.4%, despite 40 basis points of headwind from foreign currency, as well as an impact from one less business day in the quarter versus last year. Organic growth would have exceeded the high end of our 7% to 8% range were it not for these two factors. On the profitability side, we continue to make progress. Gross margin of 51.4% is the highest first-quarter gross margin that we have recorded in recent history. As expected, strategic growth investments did temper EBITDA margins a bit in the quarter, but we continue to anticipate an improving margin profile as we move through the back half of the year. Finally, we delivered operating cash flow of $147 million and free cash flow of $140 million, up 15% and 17%, respectively, versus last year, enabling a balanced capital allocation strategy. Diving further into the quarter, we saw good growth across each of our service offerings. In the first quarter, residential revenue increased 8.2%, commercial pest control rose 10.2%, and termite and ancillary increased by 13.2%. Organic growth was also healthy across the portfolio, with growth of 5.7% in residential, 7.4% in commercial, and 11.1% in the termite and ancillary area. Importantly, our organic growth rate on our recurring base of commercial business grew at nearly 10%. We remain encouraged that our investments in this area are paying off. Turning to profitability, our gross margins were healthy at 51.4%, up 20 basis points versus last year. We continue to be positive on the price-cost equation and saw good performance across several key cost categories. Looking at our four major buckets of service costs—people, fleet, materials and supplies, as well as insurance and claims—we saw improvements in margins associated with people costs, materials and supplies, as well as the insurance and claim area, which was somewhat offset by higher fleet expense. Quarterly SG&A cost as a percentage of revenue increased by 70 basis points versus last year. We saw healthy leverage on administrative people costs, which enabled reinvestment in incremental advertising and selling expenses associated with the growth initiatives that we've discussed previously. First-quarter GAAP operating income was $143 million, up 7.7% year-over-year. Adjusted operating income was $147 million, up 6.7% versus the prior year. First-quarter EBITDA was $173 million, up 8.1% and representing a 21% margin. Interest expense was $2 million lower year-over-year due to lower average debt balances and a lower average rate versus last year. We expect interest expense for the remainder of the year to be slightly elevated compared to last year due to higher debt levels associated with our recent M&A activity. Notably, we expect interest expense to be $8 million to $10 million in Q2 on the higher borrowings. The effective tax rate was 23.5% in the quarter, lower than the 26% we expect for the year, due to timing of certain tax benefits associated with the vesting of restricted shares. We expect the second-quarter tax rate to approximate 26%. Quarterly GAAP net income was $105 million, or $0.22 per share, increasing from $0.19 per share in the same period a year ago. For the first quarter, we had non-GAAP pre-tax adjustments associated with the FOX acquisition-related items totaling approximately $4 million of pre-tax expense in the quarter. Accounting for these expenses, adjusted net income was $108 million, or $0.22 per share, increasing 10%. Turning to cash flow and the balance sheet, operating cash flow increased 15% in the quarter to $147 million. We generated $140 million of free cash flow, a 17% increase versus last year. Cash flow conversion, the percent of income that was converted into operating cash flow, was very strong as well, above 130% for the quarter. As a reminder, our second-quarter cash flow will be impacted by a deferred tax payment associated with a disaster relief measure granted to those with operations impacted by Hurricane Helene that we discussed on our fourth-quarter call. We made acquisitions totaling $27 million, and we paid $80 million in dividends in the first quarter. During the quarter, we executed our inaugural bond offering, issuing $500 million of ten-year notes with the tightest bond IPO credit spread for any industrial company since 2016. We also established a $1 billion commercial paper program, which will generate ongoing savings as short-term funding needs arise. Our leverage ratio stands at 0.8 times. Our balance sheet is very healthy and positions us well to continue to execute on our balanced capital allocation strategies. As Jerry mentioned, we closed the Saela acquisition earlier in April and are excited about the strategic growth opportunities this acquisition will provide us. Let me share a few financial details on the acquisition. We expect it to add between $45 million to $50 million of revenue in 2025, with approximately $15 million in Q2. From an EBITDA standpoint, Saela's margin profile is neutral to ours, and we anticipate the deal to be accretive to earnings in the first full year of ownership. We are in the process of finalizing our purchase accounting and will provide an update on this during our Q2 call in July.