Thanks, Brandon. Before I discuss our first quarter operating results, I wanted to identify a change in the composition of our portfolio categories as seen on Slide 11. Beyond the same-store and acquisition portfolios that we've previously reported on, we will now add a repositioning portfolio for assets that are undergoing significant renovations and/or business model changes. As more fully described later in the presentation, we have identified five such assets for strategic repositioning to capture a higher rate private pay customer base. This repositioning will require tailored operating platform changes and medium range capital reinvestment plans. These communities will be excluded from our same-store until these strategic plans have been fully executed. Starting on Slide 12 with the same-store comparison of year-over-year quarters, the company drove off occupancy 100 basis points to 86.8%. Coupled with a 5.5% RevPOR increase over the same period, annualized same-store revenues increased $60 million or 7.4%. With 65% of the increased revenues flowing through to NOI, the company grew same-store NOI by 19.3% and realized a 27.6% margin, a 280 basis point increase over the 24.8% posted in the first quarter of last year. Moving on to Slide 13. Our 2024 acquisition communities continue to deliver strong sequential growth. Note that, these figures contemplate the at share results of our two joint venture investments and exclude the December 31st acquisition of our Airy Hills community, which is scheduled to open later this year. Comparing to the fourth quarter of 2024, occupancy gained 70 basis points and RevPOR increased by 2.3%. The full impact of the rate profile is temporarily muted by the disparate timing of when the previous operators pushed through their last resident rate increases. We expect the rate increase profile to align more with our same-store rate trajectory once all communities are in a full annual renewal cycle. Again using sequential quarters to the acquisition communities that share, resident revenue grew $5.2 million on an annualized basis, with nearly 80% of this growth flowing through to NOI. This resulted in 31.3% NOI growth and a 26.3% NOI margin, a 450 basis point increase from the fourth quarter, when the company was onboarding 10 communities from the October and November acquisitions. As we move through the year, the operating team will be focused on continued integration of Sonida's operating platform to unlock additional value from these acquisitions. On Slide 14, we've laid out similar metrics on the total portfolio, which rolls-up the same-store portfolio, the acquisition portfolio and the repositioning portfolio that Brandon will touch on in more depth shortly. Note that, the overall decrease in year-over-year occupancy is simply attributed to the addition of acquisition communities at lower average occupancy and that were not included in the first quarter 2024 results. With another successful annual rate renewal completed in March, the total portfolio's NOI margin of 25.7% would expand further with a full quarter's impact from these elevated rental rates. Moving ahead to Slide 16. On a same-store basis, the average annual rent renewal on March 1st was 6.9%, which was applicable to 71% of the total residents. When comparing to the previous quarter last year, the blended private pay and Medicaid rate increased 4.9%. We believe, another strong year of resident rate increases combined with the 100 basis point occupancy expansion is continued testament to the value Sonida provides to our residents and their loved ones. The company continues to expand its level of care revenues with an annualized year-over-year increase of $1.8 million or 13.6% on its same-store portfolio. This was driven by strong and wide adoption of our recently introduced software system that helps us to 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 that appropriately differentiates the degree of care being provided by our staff. Both the utilization of our clinical software and new pricing structure led to immediate value creation across the recently on boarded acquisition communities. Diving into more of the margin drivers, we will move ahead to Slide 17 to discuss operating expense trends. As a percent of revenue, total labor excluding benefits for the first quarter decreased 110 basis points, as compared to the same quarter in 2024. This relative decrease in labor yielded 71% in incremental flow through on the additional revenue for the same period and is reflective of continued stabilization of total hours worked and average hourly wage profile. This flow through profile is anchored by a strong employee base with increasing year-over-year retention as Brandon referenced in his earlier comments. On the non-labor expense front, absolute cost increased only $200,000 from Q1 2024 to Q1 2025. This is largely the result of our ability to hold fixed cost increases to inflationary levels in areas such as insurance and real estate taxes, while also utilizing the total portfolio scale to drive down our per unit cost profile in areas such as food and service contracts. Closing out the P&L for this quarter's earnings, our G&A has shown stabilization following the one-time build out of our business development and operational excellence functions in 2024 to support the overall growth initiatives of the company. This quarter's strong operating results from our acquisition portfolio were tied directly to our team's ability to swiftly integrate these communities into the Sonida operating model. G&A excluding non-cash stock-compensation expense and one time transaction severance costs decreased $200,000 from $7.7 million recognized during the fourth quarter. Notwithstanding material acquisitions, the company's goal is to continue to maintain its current G&A composition. Moving to the balance sheet on Slide 18. Our total debt as shares comprised of 61% fixed rate debt. Without the inclusion of the company's secured credit facility, the weighted average rate is 5.2% 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 remaining under its facility, with approximately $43 million immediately available as of the end of the quarter. The company anticipates an increase in availability as the underlying borrowed 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 7x based on acquisition NOI stabilization, continued same-store growth and responsible debt management. Finally, as of today, the company is in compliance with all financial covenants required under its mortgages and credit facility. And finally, on Slide 19, last year we introduced a bridge to $100 million of NOI based on 2024's pro forma in place NOI of $78 million and an assumption driven placeholder for growth through community stabilization of $22 million. We were able to share only limited visibility into attainment during our year-end earnings report due to acquiring 10 of the 19 operating acquisition communities in the final quarter of the year. Today, we are excited to report that, with our first full quarter of total portfolio stabilization behind us, we were able to realize $12 million in annualized NOI growth attributed to incremental actual portfolio NOI recognized in Q1 2025, as well as the run rate impact to NOI from another successful annual rate increase campaign. As we continue to drive occupancy expansion and leverage pricing power to pass-through renewal and market rate increases, while driving our unit cost economics down, we continue to believe that this $100 million of NOI is an achievable near-term target with meaningful upside thereafter. Back to you, Brandon.