Great. Thank you, Steve, and good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining the Schneider call today. Let me start by offering a strategic framework for our priorities as an organization. It starts with maintaining a disciplined approach to the allocation of capital with specific emphasis around our targeted strategic growth drivers of dedicated, intermodal and logistics. Over the long term, we believe these strategic priorities enable growth, market share gains, more stable and resilient earnings streams and enhance return on invested capital. Secondly, our additional investment priorities involve our people, process and technology efforts to deliver the optimal customer carrier and associate experience. That experience is increasingly digital in nature, and it provides timely and relevant information in ways our trade partners and associates prefer and need to consume it. Now let's bring it in close to the first quarter of the year, and let me offer a high-level assessment of what is transpiring consistent with our beliefs coming into the year. And then what is developed differently than our expectations or perhaps occurring at a different pace than expected. First, to the progressing as expected front. Starting with Dedicated. Dedicated truck count grew 228 units year-over-year in the first quarter. The number of new business contract closures for late second quarter and third quarter implementations are very encouraging as we continue to prioritize growth in Dedicated in our Truckload segment. Our new business pipeline remains at historically high levels. In fact, Dedicated solutions presented to customers in the first quarter is up over 40% from the first quarter of a year ago. We are in position to close the year with several hundred more units of organic tractor growth. Additionally, we are actively pursuing potential acquisitive opportunities that complement our Dedicated organic growth initiatives and overall enterprise growth strategy. Next, in Intermodal, we are focusing on our new and existing strategic rail partnerships and the broader positioning of the offering for volume recovery. Overall, rail fluidity has improved as we are experiencing less friction and delays associated with the container dwell time at customer loading and unloading locations, as well as within the rail terminals. With the transition to the Union Pacific, we are experiencing improved network fluidity and service reliability. As the freight demand recovers, we expect to gain additional asset productivity quickly and grow revenues and earnings contribution with the current container asset base. We continue to look for additional ways to pursue intermodal conversion growth by leveraging the core competencies that our asset-based model enables. We believe the recently announced partnership with the newly formed CPKC offers an attractive opportunity to garner additional freight volume between Mexico and the United States. This is a relatively small portion of our total agreement with the UP, and this also opens up corridors that do not overlap with the UP, and where we were previously less competitive. We believe this new agreement by itself will be a catalyst for intermodal growth. In addition to the strength of this new agreement, our asset ownership model, our experienced operating team in Mexico City, where we've been doing business for over 30 years, provide further substance to our service offering. The next item is our power-only offering in the Logistics segment. I am pleased with the relative resiliency of power-only and the incremental enterprise volumes that is enabled in a challenging freight demand condition. Sequentially, from the fourth quarter to the first quarter, power-only maintained 93% of their daily order volume. This service offering performed well during a soft quarter while maintaining the additional capacity that will enable growth and our ability to service our customers during a market correction. Finally, we are making progress arresting inflationary cost pressures in key input cost areas, such as front and back office efficiencies, driver recruiting and onboarding costs and equipment parts expense. Furthermore, the planned delivery of new tractor equipment is occurring on schedule, and we expect these investments to enhance the driver experience and further reduce operating expenses. Now let's transition to the areas that have developed differently than our expectations or perhaps at a different pace than expected. Industry capacity levels are correcting, but at a slower pace than we anticipated. However, we are seeing signs of correction that we believe will materialize in more meaningful ways across the next couple of quarters. Those signs include owner-operator lease defaults running ahead of pre-pandemic levels, a meaningful increase in the availability of experienced driver candidates on our new driver hiring pipeline, and the overall stress in the small carrier community operating in our brokerage business as spot rates dipped below the breakeven point. It is our belief that the accelerated tightening of credit across the small carrier supply base will further hasten the level and timing of capacity correction. The inventory positioning across many of our customers is making solid progress, but the replenishment cycle remains spotty and delayed compared to our original expectation. This dynamic has been especially evident in low import volumes, which highly correlates to the intermodal volumes. The percentage of spot freight in our asset-based network is incrementally higher than we planned for this time of year. Also, the contractual renewal rates have been marginally lower than planned, and we have seen in certain customer applications, renewal rates that are not likely to be durable for all of 2023, creating pressure in the near term, but opportunities on the horizon. In summary, the current market condition has introduced a higher degree of freight volume recovery uncertainty from a timing perspective, particularly in the network offerings, in Truckload and Intermodal along with the transactional volumes in Logistics. However, we do expect an improvement in freight volumes into a moderating capacity condition in the latter portion of 2023. Let me turn it back to Steve to provide further insight into our 2023 guidance.