Thanks Jubran. Returning to the first quarter, the broader macro environment, weather and shopper trends created some challenges. Like many other retailers, we faced external factors and headwinds in Q1 that impacted our financial results. Severe weather in January resulted in a number of store closures and traffic disruptions early in the quarter, impacting Q1 sales by approximately 50 basis points. In addition, we experienced unfavorable holiday shifts in Canada at the beginning and the end of our fiscal quarter associated with New Year's and Good Friday, impacting Canada Q1 sales by approximately 90 basis points. While our U.S. business was in line with our revised expectations, our Canadian business did not perform as we expected. This is a challenging time in Canada for many retailers and the macro headwinds have gotten stronger since the end of last year. The softness we experienced in Q1 was driven mostly by a pronounced slowdown in mid- to late March, primarily driven by fewer visits from non-loyalty members. Importantly, our non-loyalty member customer segment skews younger and on the lower end of our household income scale. This demographic tends to be more effective when the economy takes a downturn. They're shopping less often, as typically happens when people are stretched for cash and are uncertain about the future. By comparison, sales from our core loyalty members who make up 70% of our sales base were more resilient in the month of March in Canada. In fact, we continue to add loyalty members at a healthy pace in the Canadian market, growing 12.9% year-over-year in quarter 1. Moreover, our customer data shows that loyalty members remain firmly committed to our brand, with high shopper satisfaction and low attrition, particularly amongst our best and highest spenders who represent nearly half of our sales. Given our operating model where we generate our supply locally and where our cost of goods is principally labor, we believe Savers Value Village is uniquely positioned to perform amidst these headwinds. Our operating model provides nimbleness to manage our production and production labor can be adjusted to be more in line with consumer demand, thereby limiting pressure on our EBITDA margins. We will be aggressively testing ways to increase shopper trip frequency and reengage customers who may not have shopped with us recently. These efforts, which include increasing marketing in certain Canadian markets, focusing production on certain categories, which we know drive frequency and purchases and delivering targeted promotions have already begun. In this environment, consumers are focused on quality and value. Savers Value Village delivers a unique value proposition to these consumers, offering quality items at the right price. When it comes to the consumer, our customer data in North America continues to remain very positive. Our customer satisfaction scores remain high. Our merchandise selection continues to resonate with shoppers and customers' intent to shop levels remain very strong. We believe our brand is exceptionally positioned to meet the needs of today's consumers. Before I move on to our detailed financial results, I'd like to take a moment to address the CFO transition we announced today. We are thrilled to welcome Michael Maher as our new CFO, effective Monday, replacing Jay Stasz. I want to thank Jay for his many contributions to Savers in helping us successfully launch our IPO, and we wish him all the best. Michael is a seasoned finance leader with more than 25 years of retail and consumer experience, most recently as the Interim CFO of Nordstrom. He is a perfect fit as we position Savers Value Village to capitalize on our accelerating growth opportunities we're really excited to have him on board. Michael is looking forward to joining us on future calls. But for today, I'll take you through our first quarter financials in a little more detail. Let's start with sales. Net sales increased 2.5% to $354 million. Our net sales growth was driven by new store openings and the comparable same-store sales increase of 0.3%. As a reminder, we were up against our highest same-store comparison of the year in Q1. In last year's first quarter, comparable store sales increased 9% in Canada and 5.6% in the U.S. and 7.2% on a consolidated basis. In the United States, net sales increased 4.7% to $192.6 million. Comparable store sales increased 2.3%, driven by both an increase in transactions and an average basket. In Canada, net sales were flat at $134 million. Comparable store sales declined 2.6%, driven primarily by declines in transactions from non-loyalty members. Cost of merchandise sold as a percentage of net sales increased 260 basis points to 44.7%, with the increase driven by higher material, labor, benefits and freight costs. The increase in material costs as a percentage of net sales was in line with expectations and driven by the ramp of the 2 new centralized processing centers that were opened in the second half of last year and the higher mix of processing coming from those facilities. The increase in labor as a percentage of sales was driven by 2 things: higher labor rates, which again were expected, and secondly, declines in labor productivity, which was unexpected and was driven by the deceleration in Canadian sales in the month of March. While we do look to align production with sales trends, the drop-off in March Canadian sales made it difficult to properly align production levels late in the quarter. Since May 1, we have better aligned production levels to consumer demand. The increase in benefits expenses as a percentage of sales resulted from a higher-than-expected health care claims late in the quarter. Pounds processed and donation mix. We processed 238 million pounds in the quarter and generated a sales yield of $1.41. This compares with 240 million pounds processed and a sales yield of $1.39 in the first quarter last year. On-site and GreenDrop donations represented 71.9% of pounds processed in the quarter versus 68.3% in last year's first quarter. Our on-site donations were again very strong in the first quarter and we remain pleased with the quality of our inventory. Salaries, wages and benefits expense was $84 million compared to $93 million in the first quarter last year. These figures included $18 million of IPO-related stock-based compensation in this year's first quarter and $24 million of special onetime bonuses in last year's first quarter. Excluding these items, salaries, wages and benefits as a percentage of net sales declined 120 basis points to 18.6%. The decline was primarily driven by lower incentive compensation. Selling, general and administrative expenses as a percentage of net sales decreased 30 basis points to 22%, primarily driven by lower maintenance and utility costs. Depreciation and amortization increased 26.4% to $18.3 million, while interest expense decreased 34.3% to $16.1 million. Net income and adjusted EBITDA, the GAAP net loss for the first quarter was $500,000. Adjusted net income increased 32% to $13.9 million or $0.08 per diluted share compared to $10.5 million or $0.07 per diluted share in last year's first quarter. Adjusted EBITDA increased 2.1% to $60.3 million and our adjusted EBITDA margin was relatively flat with last year's first quarter at 17%. Turning to the balance sheet, we ended the first quarter with $102 million of cash and cash equivalents. At the end of the first quarter, our total borrowings outstanding were $765.8 million. And our net leverage based on a trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA was 2.1x. We've taken a number of steps to strengthen our balance sheet over the past several months. In late January, we amended our senior secured credit agreement. The amended agreement combined with a corresponding upgrade of our debt rating by Moody's, lowered our borrowing rate spread by 175 basis points, S&P subsequently upgraded our credit rating as well in April. In early March, we paid down $49.5 million of principal on our senior secured notes. And finally, in April, subsequent to the first quarter, we terminated our interest rate and cross-currency swaps and realized net proceeds of $38 million, adding to our cash position and further strengthening our balance sheet after the end of the first quarter. As mentioned, we acquired 2 Peaches LLC on May 6, 2024. Seven stores will be included in our United States store base beginning in the second quarter. As discussed earlier, we are increasing our investment in these growth opportunities and do not expect material contribution year 1 from these stores. As Jubran discussed, this acquisition represents an important step forward in our strategy to open new markets. Let me wrap up the financial section with a few comments on how we are thinking about business for the rest of the year and our guidance figures. On the sales side, we are reiterating our full year 2024 outlook at $1.57 billion to $1.59 billion. Given the performance of our new U.S. stores and with the inclusion of $7 million from 2 Peaches, we currently expect to be at or above the midpoint of the total sales guidance range. We are also reiterating our full year comparable store sales increase in the range of 2% to 3%. Absent a macro improvement in Canada, we believe we are more likely to come at the lower end of our comp store sales growth range of 2% to 3% for the year, with Canadian comps diluting consolidated comp performance. On a 2-year stack basis, comparable store sales will be 7.5% in the first quarter, and we are modeling between 6% and 6.5% for the remaining quarters. As a reminder, our same-store sales comparisons get easier as the year progresses, and total net sales should benefit in the back half of the year from new store openings and the 2 Peaches acquired stores. As mentioned earlier, we cut production levels in Canada in early May to align with demand trends, and this should help profitability in the coming quarters. The combination of improving net sales growth and production leverage should drive higher flow-through to the bottom line as the year progresses. Given the negative year 1 contribution from 2 Peaches, increased marketing efforts to stimulate Canadian sales, increased investments in our team and processes ahead of accelerated new store openings in the back half of the year and beyond and the effects of top line pressure in the Canadian comps, we are guiding our full year adjusted EBITDA to a range of $330 million to $340 million, which at the midpoint of our total net sales guidance would be an adjusted EBITDA margin of 21% to 21.6%. With the higher sales and flow-through outlook in the second half of the year, we would expect adjusted EBITDA to decrease slightly on a year-over-year basis in the first half, an increase in the mid- to high single-digit percentage range on a year-over-year basis in the second half. In conclusion, the Savers Value Village long-term growth algorithm continues to solidify. Our significant self-generated cash flows being deployed to open new stores, opportunistically acquire, innovate to drive a steady and cost-effective flow of supply to new and existing stores and markets and invest in technology that provides our organization with the data to execute at the highest levels. I hope you took away that our growth trajectory continues to accelerate and it's highlighted by 29 new stores in 2024, consisting of 22 new store openings and 7 via the 2 Peaches transaction, 4 new off-site production facilities, 8 new automated book processing deployments, double-digit growth in our loyalty member program, strong overall shopper satisfaction, and we expect it to be approximately 1.5x net leverage by the end of the year and all of this while delivering value with an average unit retail of around $5. Again, I'd like to thank all of our team members who I truly believe are the best, most passionate people in the industry. We would now like to open the call for questions. Operator?