Thanks, Brandon. I will be picking up on slide five for those following along in the deck. Despite a continued challenging operating environment, the company realized a seventh straight quarter of both occupancy and revenue growth, as seen on slides five through eight of the investor presentation. Please note that these slides are presented on both a consolidated and same-store basis. The 2022 acquisition of two smaller independent living communities in Indiana accounts for the difference in rate KPIs between these two presentations. We have now seen portfolio occupancy attain pre-pandemic levels with more room for expansion in 2023. With the foundation of occupancy recovery firmly in place, we are targeting meaningful but responsible in-place and market rate increases. Based on our recent investments in programming and physical plant, we believe these increases are sustainable and will significantly contribute towards the recapture of historical margins. Specifically, RevPAR increased 1.7% from the previous quarter or 6.8% on an annualized basis as the company utilizes a rolling anniversary convention. In addition to strong occupancy, the increase is primarily a result of management’s recent organizational realignment and refocus on rate. Part of this refocus includes enhanced communication and transparency with our community leaders, which in turn, assist in individual rate conversations with our residents and love ones. Amongst other revenue initiatives more fully described on page nine, we continue to push on our recently implemented resident rate review cadence, which again expands transparency and market awareness for each of our community and sales leaders. During the quarter, we invested in an internally developed resident rate cube that incorporates multiple attributes into an overall rate -- resident rate assessment. Moving on to slide 10 in the investor presentation. Last quarter, we discussed the dilutive impact contract labor was having on our margin recovery. For the quarter, we are pleased to report that contract labor decreased $525,000 or approximately $175,000 per month on a run rate basis. In comparison, our direct labor increased $474,000 for the quarter, which is nearly a one-for-one swap of temporary labor for permanent hires. However, excluding the month of December, which is seasonally the highest payroll month of the year, and in this instance, unfavorably impacted by winter storm Elliot, the monthly run rate increase quarter-over-quarter was $125,000 a month. Again, this compares to a comparable decrease in contract labor of $175,000. What this analysis indicates is that both permanent staffing levels and wage composition have largely stabilized out of a hyperinflationary period with opportunities to further reduce contract labor to frame more normalized wage increases in 2023. Staying on the same slide, our food costs per unit are programmatically moving down as our Q3 implementation of the GPO continues to take root with monthly compliance percentages steadily increasing. On to slide 11, where I’d like to identify a few important takeaways regarding our debt. First, in connection with the December financing of the two Indiana communities purchased earlier in the year, the company acquired an interest rate cap on the full notional amount of the 12 communities secured by our loan with Ally Bank. Second, we are happy to report that all of our debt is now either fixed or variable with a full hedge in place, greatly limiting the company’s exposure to further and/or prolonged elevated interest rates. Finally, the company was in compliance with all financial covenants required under our mortgages as more fully described in the 10-K to be filed later today. Finally, I’d like to spend a bit of time on our 12th and final slide of the investor deck. As a result of the company’s current liquidity profile and monthly all-in cash burn, the company developed various cash preservation initiatives to immediately assist in reducing the run rate cash burn and shorten the bridge to run rate cash generation. A good number of these initiatives are already in flight as part of the new management team operational playbook refresh and referenced on today’s call. Additionally, the company is committed to reducing its corporate G&A to 10% of revenues by the end of the year with significant and permanent changes already taking place. With the implementation of a new ERP on January 1st, the company is able to leverage its technology and related workflow to more closely manage its recurring capital spend, resulting in overall spending reductions and more ROI pointed spend. Finally, the company is engaged in meaningful and collaborative discussions with its lending groups to explore the modification of its debt with the intention to create both short-term liquidity and long-term value for its investors. Back to you, Brandon.