Thanks, Scott, and good morning, everyone. I'll begin by addressing our quarterly results, which are detailed on pages seven and eight of our presentation. During the first quarter, we reported adjusted earnings of $81.1 million or $1.34 per share compared to $82.7 million or $1.47 per share a year ago. The results were driven by earnings growth at the Gas Utility and Midstream segment, offset by lower earnings at marketing and other. Gas utility earnings were higher, reflecting increased earnings at Spire Alabama and Spire Gulf, partially offset by lower Spire Missouri earnings. Contribution margin increased across all utilities. We benefited from higher ISRIS revenues in Missouri and new rates and usage at Spire Alabama, net of weather mitigation, offset in part by lower Missouri usage which was not fully mitigated. Utility earnings also reflected lower run-rate O&M expense and higher depreciation expense. We saw strong earnings growth in our midstream segment driven by new contracts on additional capacity and higher rates on contract renewals of existing capacity at Spire Storage and the acquisition of MOGAS in January of last year. Our marketing segment was lower than the prior year due to reduced market volatility combined with higher transportation storage fees. I would like to note that we expect marketing to deliver within its originally expected guidance range during the fiscal year. Lastly, other corporate costs were higher primarily due to the absence of a $6.3 million after-tax benefit of an interest rate hedge settlement that occurred in the prior year, coupled with higher interest expense this year. I will briefly touch on a couple of drivers of our results. We experienced another warm start to the winter in both Missouri and Alabama. From a heating degree day perspective, Missouri was 18% warmer than normal. Although this was in line with last year, usage by residential customers was down approximately 4%, resulting in lower volumetric margins of $3.4 million. Alabama was 25% warmer than normal and also warmer than last year. However, temperature-sensitive margins were effectively mitigated. We remain focused on cost management and we expect run-rate operation and maintenance expense at the gas utility to remain flat relative to fiscal 2024 levels. During the quarter, utility run-rate O&M expense was lower by $1.6 million when compared to last year. Turning now to our growth outlook on page nine. As Scott mentioned, we are reaffirming our long-term adjusted earnings per share growth target of 5% to 7%. This growth is supported by 7% to 8% rate-based growth in our largest utilities, Spire Missouri, and continued timely recovery of investments eligible for ISRIS. Continued equity growth in the Southeast coupled with annual RSE resets, our ten-year CapEx plan of $7.4 billion, and a consistent focus on cost management. We remain committed to executing on our strategy and are affirming our FY 2025 adjusted earnings guidance range of $4.40 to $4.60 per share. Moving to Slide ten, our three-year financing plan remains unchanged from what we laid out in November. We expect our ATM program to fulfill our remaining equity needs through 2027. At the beginning of this fiscal year, we had a total of $75 million outstanding forward sales agreements. We settled $32 million at the end of December and plan to settle the remaining $43 million by the end of March. Our long-term debt financing plan through 2027 includes issuances for the refinancing of maturities and incremental debt of approximately $600 million to fund our capital plan. Our FFO to debt and dividend payout ratio targets remain unchanged. In summary, we are executing in line with our plans and continue to feel positive about our financial position going forward. With that, let me turn it back over to you, Scott.