Thanks, Pat and good morning, everyone. I’ll start on Slide 7, with an update on our clean energy transition. The first phase of this transition, our exit from coal, was designed to achieve more than environmental benefits. Each step of our plan has been carefully considered to also balance customer rates and provide support for the communities impacted by our transition. We continue to support New Mexico’s goal to be a clean energy leader and follow the direction laid out in the Energy Transition Act. As Pat mentioned, we retired Unit 1 of the San Juan Generating Station at the end of June. We have planned to keep Unit 4 running through September 30th to ensure we get through our summer peak season. Our teams are doing a phenomenal job, keeping our resources running, monitoring our system needs, and ensuring we have adequate power to meet our rising demand. I wanted to give a special thanks to the team at San Juan who have been working towards these plant retirement days after serving New Mexico for decades. There is still plenty of work to be done to facilitate the decommissioning and reclamation of the plants to mine. But these are significant occasions and I don’t want to pass them up without acknowledging the contribution of our great teams. In July, we completed the funding required by the Energy Transition Act to aid the communities and workers impacted by the closure. This has been a top priority, and you will remember that we have pre-funded some of these amounts earlier this year to support the mine employees who were impacted first and needed the severance and training dollars. In the meantime, the portions of the Energy Transition Act pertaining to when the utility issues bonds and resets customer rates has been challenged once again and has gone back to the New Mexico Supreme Court for resolution. Since the onset of the pandemic, PNM has been deferring a general rate review to support our customers through these difficult times. Also, agreements with parties to the merger stipulation was to not file a rate review until December of 2022, and we have kept that commitment. By the time new rates are put in place in January of 2024, we will have made over $2 billion of investments since our last rate review that are not part of our current customer rates. Overall, cost control and cost reductions from retirement of San Juan partially offset this regulatory lag and allowed us to agree to defer any rate increases to our customers. Despite the overall plan, that benefits customers, the New Mexico Commission ordered us in June to separate out those pieces and provide a rate credit to customers tied to San Juan without any consideration for other investments that have been made since our last rate review. We have appealed the order to the New Mexico Supreme Court and also requested a stay to pause the rate credits during the appeal process. The request for the stay is under consideration by the court and we’ve begun to implement the credits in the meantime. The appeal process does not have a statutory time period, but the monthly credits will end once new customer rates are implemented, which is expected in January of 2024. We also continue to pursue an exit from the Four Corners plant at the end of 2024 to complete our full exit from coal. This case is also under appeal with the New Mexico Supreme Court. We filed the final briefing under the schedule in mid-June and will also request oral arguments in this case. The transition to clean energy is our industry’s most significant change of our time. We also know that it is the right thing to do for our customers, our communities, the environment and our shareholders, and we will continue down this path. Now, turning to Slide 8, in our load growth by service area, at PNM, our growth expectations for the year are running a little behind guidance expectations for 2022. The primary driver of growth in guidance was from our Industrial customers. This growth has been slightly delayed by supply chain and other customer-specific reasons. These customers have our lowest per kilowatt hour rate, so there’s not a significant impact on earnings for this delay. On a positive note, Residential and Commercial load growth is slightly ahead of expectations. Second quarter weather was milder than normal. We warmed up quickly in April, ending the heating season earlier than usual. Temperature soared in May, but then cooler temperatures came in with some welcomed rain in June. As we move past the quarter ended July, PNM had a stretch of several hundred-degree days and hit a new system peak for the first time since 2013. This demonstrates that – what we’ve been saying – seeing on the PNM system for several years as energy efficiency and rooftop solar have kept our total load growing at a slower rate, the peak use on the system is growing and requires additional investments to meet the increased demand of the future. The state economic development efforts continue to attract businesses, relocations, and expansions, and the current level of inquiries from potential customers is significant. Turning to TNMP. Weather and load had significant impacts in the second quarter. Both volumetric and demand-based load is growing above our expectations as the Texas economy spurs expansion of our communities in North Texas and the Gulf Coast area. In West Texas, new crypto mining customers pushed demand base load higher for the quarter. Unlike New Mexico, temperatures in Texas were above normal through the quarter, and TNMP set a new system peak in June. These temperatures continue to rise in July and several new system peaks were reported. Turning to Slide 9, I’ll cover the key regulatory filings and upcoming filings in each jurisdiction. At PNM, we have already talked about our merger, San Juan and Four Corners appeals at the New Mexico Supreme Court. I also wanted to update you on upcoming filings in the second half of the year. We are scheduled to make a Grid Mod filing in October. This filing was originally requested by the Commission in March. In our communications with the Commission, we indicated that we were preparing a multi-year Grid Mod plan that would include automated meters as well as associated communication networks, automated control system, investments related to reducing outage and restoration times, a customer portal, and enhanced cybersecurity measures. The Commission was supportive of these efforts and for granting more time to prepare the corresponding application covering a five-year planning horizon. We will look to update our investment plan next quarter to align with our filing. And then in December, we plan to file PNM’s general rate review based on a future test year of 2024. We will share more information about the filing once it’s made, but you can expect the primary driver to be recovery of rate base made since our last future test year filing in 2016. On the FERC transmission side of the business, we continue to recover our PNM transmission investments under a FERC formula rate. And in this year’s update, we are recovering an additional $65 million of rate base with new rates that became effective June 1st. At TNMP, progress continues on the regulatory agenda for this year. Following the approval and implementation of our first transmission cost of service increase in March, we made an annual distribution recovery and filing in April. We reached a Settlement in Principle with parties in this filing and interim rates based on this agreement have been approved for an implementation on September 1st. In this settlement, the recovery of replacement AMS meters is deferred until our next filing. The expenses and taxes associated with these meters are also deferred as part of the settlement, resulting in 99% of our requested net increase and the recovery of $95.7 million of transmission investment. This marks our third year reaching a successful settlement on these filings. On July 2022, we filed our second transmission cost of service filing for 2022 for a recovery of another $36 million of new rate base. Based on previous years, we would expect rates associated with this filing to also be implemented in September. Overall, the Texas Economic and Regulatory Environment continues to positive TNMP well for continued growth and recovery of investments needed to maintain and expand our infrastructure. I’m going to turn things over to Lisa to walk through earnings impacts for the quarter and considerations for guidance going forward.