Thanks, Brandon. I'm equally excited to share the results from this quarter, which are starting to reflect all the amazing contributions and tireless efforts from the team over the past 6 to 8 months. Starting with top line on Slides 5 and 6, it bears repeating that the company realized an 8th straight quarter of both occupancy and revenue growth. The slight increase in occupancy is particularly noteworthy for 2 reasons: The first is that the historical trend of Q1 seasonality softening is returning to the industry, as seen in our recent peer filings; the second is that the company was able to achieve its occupancy goals despite a programmatic rollout of our resident rate increases, as discussed in more detail in a few slides. With the foundation of stabilizing and improving occupancy across the portfolio firmly in place, our regional leaders continue to focus their resource and efforts towards a small subset of underperforming communities with customized performance plans. We believe extra focus to address underperformance on these communities, when successful, will be a meaningful driver of overall portfolio occupancy growth to push our run rate occupancy north of 85% in the second half of the year. We are encouraged with both industry and company metrics that reflect accretive incremental margins when occupancy begins to approach and exceed this level. Rate margin improvement should continue across the remaining stabilized portfolio, based on a combination of macro industry recovery trends and specific Sonida initiatives discussed on previous calls. Moving to Slide 8. In our last earnings call on March 30th, we referenced the company's most significant active initiative to address rate recovery and growth through the acceleration of resident rate increases on in-place leases greater than 12 months. Our belief that our residents would support responsible increases commensurate with the value currently provided from our community teams manifested in a significant way this quarter. We are extremely pleased to report that we successfully executed on this initiative beginning March 1, while still slightly growing occupancy over the same period. The company realized an overall rate increase of 9.1% on a population of approximately 1,500 leases, as seen on Slide 8, directly contributing to adjusted RevPOR increases of 5.6% and 2.6% over Q1 2022 and Q4 2022, respectively. More important, the new foundation of rates should provide a permanently elevated run rate on overall portfolio margin. With another tranche of resident leases available for similar rent acceleration coming due this summer, we believe we will be successful in further pushing up RevPOR. Please note that in addition to our historical presentation of RevPAR and RevPOR, we've also presented these non-GAAP measures on an adjusted basis to remove the impact of nonrecurring state grants received in both Q1 of 2022 and -- 2023 and 2022. Amongst other revenue initiatives more fully described on Page 8, we continue to push on a recently implemented resident rate review cadence, which has allowed us to increase our quarter-over-quarter re-leasing spread by 2% for each of the last 2 quarters. Similar to our lease renewal increases, we believe that the positive 7% re-leasing spread was only achievable because of the resident and family experience created every day by our community teams. Finally, as a result of recently implemented technologies around our revamped level of care program, we have grown this revenue stream by 4% each of the last 2 quarters. We believe there is still opportunity to further push our level of care revenues across the portfolio as the program matures and evolves. Moving ahead to Slide 9, where we'll address some of the encouraging trends on the operating expense side of the business. Like our peers, we continue to be laser-focused on reducing contract labor to pre-pandemic levels. We've now seen 2 consecutive quarters where contract labor has decreased $530,000 and $670,000 in Q4 2022 and Q1 2023, respectively. This represents a monthly run rate improvement from its high point of $630,000 at Q3 2022 to just $230,000 at Q1 2023. We continue to focus on a handful of individual communities that comprise much of the contract labor consistent with our targeted deployment on the occupancy front. Over the same 6-month period, we have been able to hold direct labor relatively flat despite the rapid decrease in contract labor over the same period. We believe our leadership depth and stability have allowed us to retain our community teams, which has contributed to the avoidance of premium labor and out-of-market pay ranges. Specifically, we have realized double-digit percentage decreases in both voluntary and overall turnover ratios during the most recent quarter. Most importantly, these results create a lower overall labor run rate moving forward into a period where the composition of rate and occupancy growth should support continued margin expansion. Staying on the same slide, our food costs continue to trend down, as each month we are realizing increased compliance and optimization associated within our global purchasing organization against the economic backdrop of overall inflationary easing. Finally, the company is seeing an overall flattening of all other operating expenses relative to its revenue profile. We continue to push on the various operating initiatives rolled out over the past 6 months in an attempt to further improve our unit economics. On to Slide 10. As Brandon referenced, we are encouraged by the latest discussions surrounding the company's debt structure. Please note that Slide 10 contains only historical numbers to date and excludes any favorable impact related to potential loan modifications. In early January, we legally transitioned the last 2 communities in connection with the company's 2020 asset transfer of 18 Fannie Mae communities. This transition resulted in a noncash GAAP gain on extinguishment of debt of $36.3 million. As stated on our last call, we are happy to report that all 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 with the exception of 4 communities mortgage with Protective Life as more fully described in the 10-Q to be filed later today. Finally, I'd like to spend a bit of time on our 11th and final slides on today's investor presentation. As discussed on previous calls and in our 2022 10-K filed in March, 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. In addition to the strategic and operational initiatives already touched on this call, we are pleased that our G&A profile continues to trend towards 10% of total revenues, a significant improvement from 2022's run rate, which averaged 15% for 2021 and the first half of 2022. We've also been able to successfully leverage our recently implemented ERP system to make more informed, ROI-based decisions on how we deploy capital into our communities. This process improvement, along with a significant amount of capital reinvested into our communities in 2022, has played a key role in the improved operations of our portfolio. We believe our results, through one quarter of the year, are consistent with the overall effectiveness of these initiatives and a direct reflection of the quality of our new leadership team across every function of the company. We strongly believe that the successful execution of these ongoing initiatives should enable the company to remove any doubts on its ability to continue as a growing concern, accelerate the trajectory on cash flow generation and allow for the swift pivot to strategic growth. Back to you, Brandon.