Thanks, Brandon. My comments today will aim to provide a summary of the key financial accomplishments from the quarter and full year 2024, as well as to provide some visibility into the company's focus for 2025. One year ago, the tenor of our comments surrounded significant restructuring of the company's debt, swift pace of our transition from defense to offense. With this foundational pivot behind us, today marks the beginning of a new chapter in the company's story of ascension. 2024 saw the company raise $200 million of equity to increase its senior living real estate units by 30%, while steadily pushing up the performance of its same-store portfolio and investing in upgraded talent to unlock the value on its recent and future acquisitions. Before we discuss our operating results, I want to highlight two significant debt transactions that were executed in the fourth quarter. First, in connection with the third quarter loan modification with one of its lenders on two cross communities in Texas, the company made a discounted payoff of $18.3 million on a $28.4 million loan balance. The DPO represented a 36% discount on the loan principal balance. Second, as part of its collaborative relationship with Fannie Mae, the company extended the maturities of 18 of its individually mortgaged communities with a total debt balance of $220 million by two years. The result of this loan amendment provides for a January 2029 maturity date for all 37 communities under Fannie Mae financing. In exchange for the extended loan term, the company was required to make a series of principal paydowns totaling $10 million over the revised term of the loan, with the first payment having been made in December 2024. Following these two transactions, Sonida Senior Living, Inc. has just one near-term debt maturity for $13 million occurring in the fourth quarter, which the company expects to be able to finance. The company's next significant debt maturity is March 2027, when our $113 million term loan with Ally Bank becomes due. Starting on slide 11 with the comparison of year-over-year quarter, the company was able to increase its annualized same-store revenues by over $14 million, primarily attributable to an all-in rate increase of 5.1% over the same period, as well as 70 basis points of occupancy growth. As referenced in last year's earnings call, Q4 2023 NOI included non-recurring credits of $1.7 million for one-time real estate tax settlements and workers' comp true-ups. Excluding these Q4 2023 non-recurring credits, Q4 2024 pro forma NOI grew 9.6% and pro forma NOI margin grew 90 basis points on Q4 2023's pro forma margin of 24.6%. At this point, the company does not anticipate significant one-time real estate tax credits and has largely canvassed and addressed its reassessment population. Furthermore, changes in workers' comp accruals are generally now more refined and captured over the course of the year and the applicable quarter. Moving on to slide 12, we will review the company's annual same-store performance. The company was able to increase its revenues by 7.5% from the combination of an occupancy gain of 180 basis points and a nearly 6% RevPOR increase. Removing the one-time real estate tax credits of $1 million from 2023, our pro forma annual year-over-year adjusted community NOI, which excludes non-recurring state grants of $2.9 million received in 2023, increased 21% or $11.4 million. This increase represents nearly a 70% NOI flow-through on the increased revenues. Later in the presentation, we will expand on the components of NOI margin improvement. As occupancy continues to increase in 2025, we believe this improving NOI flow-through profile will continue to benefit the company's same-store portfolio and ultimately its recent acquisitions once stabilized. Ahead to slide 13. Q4 2024 was the first quarter since the pandemic that the company did not realize occupancy growth from the previous quarter, with a weighted average occupancy of 86.6% falling 40 basis points from its Q3 average of 87%. We believe this is largely a function of our portfolio experiencing more normalized seasonality patterns as our occupancy has reached the high 80s. Based on current lead and tour volumes and an overall increasing across the industry, we are optimistic that our occupancy will continue to grow in 2025. As seen on slide 14, the company successfully migrated to a resident-wide March 1st rate renewal anniversary in 2024, recognizing an annual rate increase of 6.3% or 7.3% without contemplation of Medicaid ancillary revenue streams that are less price dynamic in nature. Ahead of its March 1st, 2025 annual rate renewal, which we are anticipating to be directionally consistent with 2024's increase, the company experienced an overall stabilization of its same-store rate attributable to a shift in occupancy towards its independent living units. The company continues to expand its capture of level of care revenues with a year-over-year increase of $1.1 million or 8.3% on its same-store portfolio. This capture was driven by strong and wide adoption of our recently introduced software system that helps us track resident usage of clinical staff resources to better price our services. Additionally, in 2024, the company modified its memory care pricing structure to introduce a level of care surcharge to more accurately charge residents for the degree of care provided by our staff. And finally, discounts and concessions as an absolute dollar and percentage of revenue basis continue to decline year-over-year, a testament to our success in providing value to our residents. Diving into more of the margin drivers, we will move ahead to slide 15 to discuss year-over-year same-store labor trends. For the fourth quarter and full year 2024, we continue to see further stabilization of our workforce. Increases in average wages have now been generally limited to CPI-based inflationary increases, and our average annual total employee count for the same-store portfolio increased only 2.1%, which includes the conversion of premium labor to a more stable direct labor workforce. With contract labor being limited to a handful of communities, where market-specific labor constraints arise periodically, the company is focused on further optimizing labor mix by reducing its premium labor. Areas such as shift bonuses and overtime are gradually being phased out as a more stable core of full-time employees emerges. Moving ahead to all other expenses on slide 16. As a percentage of revenue, our non-labor expenses, including 2023's one-time real estate tax credits and workers' comp true-ups, have decreased 60 basis points from 27.5% in 2023 to 26.9% in 2024. This margin accretion comes despite a temporary deterioration of Medicaid-related aging, which accounts for approximately $700,000 of the increase to bad debt versus 2023. Specifically, Medicaid-eligible communities in Indiana are working through structural changes in the state plans, resulting in residents needing to reapply for Medicaid coverage and pushing out the rent collection cycle, or in some cases losing coverage altogether. To address this, the team will be working with case managers to regain resident eligibility, and more importantly, proactively prevent lapses going forward. They will also be meeting with key state and plan leaders to pursue one-time exemptions for reimbursements that may have been lost due to timely filing preclusions. And finally, we will be revising our Medicaid resident policies and procedures to better align with the evolving shift in payer dynamics in Indiana. For the remaining non-labor expenses, we believe that the quarterly expense profile will continue to track at or around inflationary rates based on the company's thorough and strategic review of its larger programs, such as food, utilities, and real estate taxes. Additionally, as the company continues to evolve the sophistication of its sales approach and leverage wider digital marketing funnels, our reliance on third-party sales referral partners should continue to wane. Jumping ahead to slide 24, where we will revisit some of our case studies on capital deployment. As a result of the company's 2023-2024 debt and equity transactions, we were able to earmark capital to communities where we believe targeted and scoped investments were needed to elevate community performance. Our Levitt's Commons and Plymouth communities are two instances where the 2024 completed projects have pushed NOI margins to nearly 30%, with expectations to drive even higher in 2025 and beyond. Our capital investment into our existing North Bend Crossing community was equally successful, driving occupancy up to 98% and generating a 400 basis point increase in margin in 2024. Moreover, the success of this asset repositioning situated the company to acquire the neighboring newly developed community, creating a large two-building campus. Moving to the balance sheet on slide 17. Inclusive of the 2024 acquisitions and related debt transactions, our total debt at share is comprised of 61% fixed-rate debt. Without inclusion of the company's recently secured credit facility, the weighted average rate is 4.7%, with the variable rate debt nearly fully hedged. With the inclusion of the credit facility, the weighted average interest rate is 5.4% for the portfolio. Currently, the company has $90 million of capacity, with approximately $35 million immediately available as of the end of the year. The company anticipates an increase in availability as the underlying borrowing base assets securing the facility continue to expand their NOI profile. The company continues to execute on its long-term strategy of delevering the balance sheet, with a target of seven times based on acquisition NOI stabilization, continued same-store growth, and responsible debt management. As of today, the company is in compliance with all financial covenants required under its mortgages and credit facility. And finally, last quarter, we introduced a bridge to approximately $100 million of NOI based on stabilization of our same-store portfolio and recent acquisitions. The timing of our capital deployment combined with the profile of what we acquired resulted in the majority of the 2024 NOI contribution being limited to the fourth quarter. As you can see on slide 19, annualizing the fourth quarter acquired NOI contribution yields an additional $9 million of NOI, or 13% growth beyond our total 2024 NOI. Following the same illustrative exercise used last quarter, that is moving occupancy to 90% and NOI margins to 30% at current rent levels creates an additional $22 million of NOI. This exercise does not include any assumptions on future rate growth. As we continue to find that we have pricing power to pass through renewal and market rate increases, we believe that this $100 million of NOI is an achievable near-term target with meaningful upside thereafter. Back to you, Brandon.