Thanks, Brandon. I will be walking through select pages of today's investor presentation, starting with slide five, hitting on some of our financial highlights. We achieved a fourteenth consecutive quarter of occupancy growth for our same-store portfolio. As a reminder, the same-store portfolio excludes the nineteen communities acquired over the past six months. On a year-over-year basis, same-store adjusted community net operating income, which excludes the nonrecurring impact of $500,000 in state grants received in Q3 2023, increased 18.3%. Beyond the increase in occupancy, the NOI growth was achieved through blended resident rate increases of 5.5% as well as continued optimization over the portfolio's variable operating. I will touch upon both rate and operating expenses in more detail later in the presentation. Earlier, Brandon referenced the company's execution on its strategic growth plan. Beyond our strong operating results, we are very pleased with two significant capital events that are foundational to our growth and the next phase of the company's development. In July and August, the company closed a senior secured credit facility for $150 million and raised $130 million of gross proceeds in a public equity offering. These transactions provided the company with capital for the acquisition closed in the fourth quarter and a discounted debt payoff that I will discuss in a bit, as well as providing additional dry powder for future bolt-on acquisitions. We expect that these transactions will be accretive to the company's equity value as we stabilize the communities acquired. Amid similar buying opportunities, an improving industry outlook, and continued improving same-store portfolio performance, we believe further delevering is achievable with a debt-to-EBITDA ratio goal of below 7x, consistent with public peers. Rounding out the highlights from this past quarter, in August, the company entered into a loan modification agreement with one of its lenders on two cross communities in Texas. The modification included revised maturities and, more importantly, the ability to make a discounted payoff of $18.5 million on the $28.7 million balance. On November 1, the company made the discounted payoff, which represented a $10 million or 36% discount on the loan principal balance. These two communities represent the last two communities that required material restructuring for the company's legacy debt stack, with the company having addressed fifty-eight of sixty mortgage loans in the past twelve months. The remaining two loans account for approximately 2.5% of the outstanding debt balance. Moving ahead to slide fifteen, resident rates, which exclude one-time fees and other ancillary revenue streams, increased 5.5% from the same quarter in 2023. Diving deeper into the revenue, level of care fees had similar year-over-year rate increases due in large part to the company's recently developed pricing structures on its memory care level. In Q3, the company saw a sequential quarter rate decline. Beyond the reemergence of seasonality within the industry, the 0.5% decline on rate from Q2 2024 is attributed to occupancy mix. Specifically, our net increase in occupancy quarter over quarter had an 84% composition of lower-rated independent living occupancy increases, with the rest of the modest increases in occupancy driven by our higher-rated assisted living and memory care lines. Finally, discounts and concessions, both on a percentage of revenue basis and absolute basis, continue along a two-year downward trend. The waning absence of discounts and concessions supports the overall stability of the company's rate profile and service offering. It is consistent with Brandon's comments on our direct efforts to internally source more quality leads and conversions over the same period. Moving to operating expense trends on slide sixteen, the cost of incremental labor to incremental revenue continues to show stabilization. For purposes of seasonal comparability, note that Q3 is burdened with one more workday and one more holiday as compared to Q2. On a year-over-year basis, Q3's total labor as a percentage of revenue improved by 230 basis points. This is consistent with the 290 basis point increase from Q2 2023 to Q2 2024 using the same metric. The number of same-store full-time employees in Q3 2024 was down slightly from the previous quarter. The annual increase in average wage rate from Q3 2023 to Q3 2024 was 3.5%, which is at or slightly below inflationary levels over the same period. We believe these trends are sustainable indicators of continued margin expansion as the portfolio's occupancy base grows. On slide seventeen, non-labor operating expenses are also showing continued signs of stabilization. On an absolute basis, these costs increased approximately $400,000 from the prior quarter. Increases in utility costs comprised nearly the entire amount of the sequential increase in Q2 2024. For seasonal comparability, the sequential increase is relatively consistent with the same increase from Q2 2023 to Q3 2023. As stated above, the company continues to drive lower cost of sales through its digital marketing and local sales programming. Concluding the remarks on Q3 financial highlights, we will turn our attention to the balance sheet. On the capital investment front, through the third quarter, we have invested more than $18 million year to date across both technology and community-based capital expenditures, including both targeted NOI-generating capital and recurring maintenance. We expect these targeted NOI projects, which feature additional or converted resident units, to positively impact performance in 2025. Our debt is comprised of 68% fixed-rate notes, with variable rate notes nearly fully hedged, yielding a weighted average interest rate just above 5% for the portfolio. As mentioned earlier, the company continues to focus on delevering its balance sheet. As of the date of this release, the company has agreed in principle on terms with Fannie Mae that would extend the maturities of eighteen of its individually mortgaged communities with a total debt balance of $220 million by two years. This will result in a January 1, 2029, maturity date for all thirty-seven communities under Fannie Mae financing. In exchange for the extended loan term, the company will make a series of principal paydowns totaling $10 million over the revised term of the loan, with the first payment expected this quarter. This transaction is subject to definitive documentation by both parties. As always, we appreciate the collaborative nature of our relationship with Fannie Mae over the last two years. As of today, the company is in compliance with all financial covenants required under its mortgages and revolving credit facility. Prior to turning the presentation back to Brandon, I wanted to spend some time on the path to value creation for the company's shareholders. Starting with our annualized Q3 NOI of $67 million, we selected illustrative data points for both occupancy and NOI margin percentage. These are supported by general industry history as well as our own recent trajectory. Applying 90% occupancy and a 30% margin to our same-store portfolio yields an incremental $11 million of NOI contribution. Additionally, layering in similar stabilization achievement on the nineteen communities acquired this year, with joint ventures being calculated at our respective ownership share, would illustratively produce an incremental $22 million of NOI. Under this assumed methodology, the total combined NOI for our owned assets would be approximately $100 million. Note that this chart makes no assumption on future rate growth and is based on current in-place rate levels. To date, the company has already incurred the majority of G&A costs needed to support the additional nineteen communities. As a reminder, the company incurs approximately $4.5 million of public company costs annually. In closing, we continue to be encouraged by the operating trajectory of the portfolio, including our ability to realize performance improvement on the recently acquired communities. Back to you, Brandon.