Thank you, Leigh Anne, and good morning, everyone. Before we begin with financial and operational results, I would like to congratulate our Jonesboro maintenance facility on achieving a significant milestone in March. This facility has gone 5 years without a lost time incident. Safety is a core value at Trinity, and this achievement is certainly worth acknowledging. As you may have heard from other companies this earnings cycle, 2025 is a year of uncertainty. While we are not immune to the current macroeconomic challenges, we are operating with agility and adaptability to respond to customers and market conditions appropriately. The railcar manufacturing industry has always had a cyclical element to it. And while we continue to believe the fundamentals of the industry have changed and this cycle is being led by the replacement level demand, the current environment gives us the opportunity to prove the resiliency of our platform. In the first quarter, GAAP earnings per share for Trinity Industries were $0.29 on revenues of $585 million. Our work to lower the breakeven on our railcars and improve the Rail Products Group margins through the cycle is reflected in this environment. Despite 38% fewer external deliveries year-over-year, our EPS was only down 12%, highlighting the strength and resilience of our platform. I am proud of our team for that work. Furthermore, our last 12 months adjusted return on equity was 14.2%, showing we continue efficiently deploying our capital to generate returns. The current environment will benefit our lease fleet of 144,000 owned and managed railcars. Our customers need the railcars they have in their fleet, and higher cost and interest rates have been and continue to support lease rate expansion, improving our business' overall returns. The forward-looking metrics for our lease fleet remains favorable with fleet utilization at 96.8% and our future lease rate differential or FLRD at 17.9%. In summary, we expect macroeconomic forces in 2025 to have some effect from those, whether through inflation, recession or other economic conditions, but we also expect to continue to be opportunistic as a railcar lessor, disciplined as a railcar builder and innovative with our customers. Moving to a market update. Market uncertainty in the first quarter continued to slow conversion inquiries to orders. Inquiry levels at the beginning of 2025 were the highest they've been in several years, but customers are taking longer to make capital decisions. We think industrial production is the best predictor of growth for our business. And while macro sentiment and confidence are trending negatively due to market uncertainty, industrial production remains positive. Over the next several quarters, decisions by our customers for new railcar orders will allow us to manage our production lines efficiently. Our current expectations for industry railcar deliveries this year are 28,000 to 33,000 railcars. While we cannot control the volatility in the current market, as an organization, we are focused on making prudent decisions to support the long-term investment in our fleet and growth of our business. Currently, we expect minimal direct cost pressures from current policy proposals. However, we have seen an impact to demand and subsequently revenue. Based on industry data, we saw the North American railcar fleet contract for the first time in about 2 years. This is further evidence that builders and lessors are remaining disciplined, limiting speculative purchases and responding to replacement needs. We did see attrition outpaced deliveries in Q1, and we would expect that to continue as long as customers delay buying decisions. Railcar activity stepped up in March with less than 19% of the fleet in storage. The relatively low level of railcars in storage is consistent with a healthy fleet utilization and renewal rate increases we have sustained. I would now like to provide some segment highlights for the quarter, beginning with the Railcar Leasing and Services segment, which includes our Leasing, Maintenance and Digital & Logistics Services businesses. As noted at the top of the call, our Leasing business continues to perform at or above our expectations. Our FLRD has been double-digit positive for 12 quarters, and in that time, we have repriced about 58% of our fleet. In the first quarter, renewal lease rates were 29.5% above expiring rates, and fleet utilization remained favorable at nearly 97%, with a renewal success rate of 75%, demonstrating that customers are holding on to their existing equipment and we continue to renew leases upward to market rates. We expect these positive trends to continue as lower railcar deliveries this year continues driving tightness in the market. Looking at the first quarter results. Revenues were flat year-over-year as higher lease rates were partially offset by a lower volume of external repairs. Furthermore, weather impacted our first quarter results for the maintenance business with lost weeks in January and February. We are also in a heavy tank car compliance year, which increases maintenance costs to our fleet. In summary, Leasing segment operating margin was up year-over-year due to higher lease rates and higher gains on lease portfolio sales, partially offset by lower volume of external repairs in our Maintenance Services business. In the quarter, we completed $34 million of lease portfolio sales and achieved gains of $6 million. Our quarterly net lease fleet investment was $87 million, in line with our full year guidance. The hard assets of our leasing business provides stable returns, which makes for a compelling investment thesis in an uncertain market. Moving to Rail Products Group, which includes our railcar manufacturing and our railcar parts businesses. Our results in this segment reflect the current operating environment. We delivered 3,060 new railcars in the quarter and received orders for 695 railcars, evidence of the delayed investment decisions I have previously acknowledged and the lumpiness of orders quarter-to-quarter. As a result, quarterly revenue was down due to lower deliveries. Operating margin of 6.2% is down both sequentially and year-over-year. This margin includes costs associated with workforce rationalization. Our backlog at the end of the quarter was $1.9 billion, and we have seen order activity improve in the second quarter. In a minute, Eric will provide updated guidance for the full year, but I wanted to acknowledge our guidance assumes that some of the inquiries we are seeing begin to convert to orders in the next few months, which will allow us to efficiently run our production lines. We believe in the power of our leasing business and in the competitive and economic advantages our manufacturing and services businesses give to our lease fleet. Although short-term volatility is outside our control, we are focused on making decisions that support the generation of long-term economic value. I'll now turn the call over to Eric to talk through financial results as well as our updated guidance for 2025.