Thanks, Brandon. I'll be picking back up on Slide 5 for this following along in the deck. Despite a continued challenging operating environment, the company realized a sixth straight quarter of both occupancy and revenue growth. With a strong foundation of continually improving revenues, we were able to increased our operational focus on more sophisticated labor management practices, in addition to the company's recently implemented rate initiatives. This is particularly relevant for one-third of our portfolio, which is enjoying occupancy above 94% and a stabilized in-place workforce. We are also encouraged to see the continued accretive impact from both recently and soon-to-be completed renovation projects, which includes our repositioned Magnolia Trails communities. Diving into the margin headwinds a little deeper, contract labor played a significant role and flat quarter-over-quarter operating margin with a $400,000 increase from the previous quarter. The quarterly increase was largely driven by 10 communities, which have struggled as a result of acute local community factors, including a nursing shortage in several of our Ohio communities and local wage wars in a few limited communities. We believe that our operational leaders have mitigated these factors with targeted action plans and are pleased with the October trends. We expect a material decrease in Q4, assuming curve trending continues. On a macro basis, though average wages continue to increase during the quarter, the percentage increase is flattening relative to the prior 12 months experience. Also, net hires increased 7.9% and 3.6% since year-end and Q2, respectively. Finally, our number of open community leadership positions decreased from 33 associates to 14 associates during the quarter. We believe these trends are all strong indicators of community workforce stability and will allow us to greatly reduce our reliance on contract labor for quarters to come. In addition to the impact on labor expense, we also believe that our workplace stability is foundational to executing on the recently deployed strategic operating initiatives. These initiatives include a heightened focus on purchasing compliance through the GPO we rolled out in August and the recently established formal rate setting structure. On the former, we recognized an 8.5% decrease in total food costs from August to September. On the latter, given the new structure and rolling calendar of resident lease expiries, we are expecting a corresponding but responsible rate lift in quarters to come. Moving on to Page 6. We wanted to illustrate the impact on margin by addressing the potential movement on our most significant KPIs. Starting with a baseline of the Q3 results, we identified the incremental impact on margin for occupancy, rate and contract labor reduction. Again, this slide does not reflect management's plan that is merely illustrative. We believe the upward trend of occupancy over the last six quarters, as illustrated on Page 8, is strong evidence that the industry recovery in Sonida's own portfolio continue to have room for growth. For the month of September, 19 communities had occupancies above 94%. Conversely, nine communities had occupancies below 72%. We believe the combination of recent capital investments and our focused sales efforts will return these communities to pre-pandemic levels. We used an incremental margin of 65% for each 100 basis points of occupancy growth, understanding that the lower occupied communities will need to incur more operating expenses than the stabilized communities. Turning to REVPOR. We believe that as a result of the company's revamped design of its rate setting function and qualified sales incentive plan, we are well positioned to capture our share of responsible rate increases, which wholly flows to the bottom line and pushes incremental margin up faster than any other KPI. Contract labor. As discussed in the last few slides, contract labor continues to be an area of high importance for the company's margin profile. Flipping to Page 7, we can see the impact of our discretionary capital projects on our performance measured from the point of project completion. With another nine community renovations nearing project end, we believe similar lift is realistic in the next nine to 12 months. Our projected discretionary spend on all these communities is $9.5 million. Touching quickly on Page 8. There is a strong overlap between the company's owned assets and high-performing MSAs, supporting the ability to execute on the KPIs identified on Slide 6. Moving to Page 9, and circling back on occupancy. We've seen an 820 basis point increase in weighted average occupancy since the low point of the pandemic. As of the end of Q3, we have achieved pre-pandemic levels for occupancy, one of the company's goals heading into the year. As mentioned a few slides back, we believe our tailored initiatives on underperforming communities will continue to move our weighted average occupancy up. These plans include repositioning of communities with our successful Magnolia Trails memory care program, stabilizing community leadership teams and investing capital refresh dollars to compete with newer product types in local markets, all of which are underway. Now moving ahead to Slide 10, where we will display our debt composition. In the face of a rising interest rate environment, approximately 80% of our borrowings on communities are fixed rate at an average rate of 4.6%. We were in compliance with all financial covenants required under our mortgages, as more fully described in the 10-Q to be filed later today. Our communities that are capitalized under floating rate debt continue to outperform underwriting expectations. Finally, we have 4 communities that are currently unlevered. Before turning the presentation over to Brandon for closing remarks on the last couple of slides, I wanted to briefly address the uses of cash from last year's recapitalization on Page 11. Nearly half of the net proceeds were used to pay off near-term maturities to provide the company with the runway needed to participate in the macro industry recovery and more importantly, execute on the company's own strategic growth plans. The company used approximately $12 million to grow its strong MSA density with the acquisition of two Indiana communities, which have seen occupancy increases of 1,700 basis points since onboarding in Q1. Beyond recurring capital needs, the company has already deployed 6 million out of a projected 9.5 million for refresh projects in selected markets that should help yield accretive returns during and beyond the recovery period. We believe the foundational initiatives late over the last 12 months will yield significant increases to our already positive operating cash profile. Back over to you on Slide 12, Brandon.