Thanks, Hala. Our first quarter results provided a strong start to the year, reflecting disciplined execution around our strategic initiatives. We exceeded expectations across key revenue and profitability metrics and achieved double-digit total revenue growth fueled by robust growth in subscription revenues. SaaS revenues grew 21%, marking our seventeenth consecutive quarter of SaaS growth of 20% or more. Transaction-based revenues were ahead of plan and grew 18.5%, driven by higher transaction volumes, including increased adoption and deployment of new transaction-based services. Our non-GAAP operating margin expanded to 26.8%, benefiting from efficiencies across our cloud operations, a mix shift to higher-margin SaaS revenues and away from lower-margin professional service and hardware revenues, and favorable operating expense trends. In addition, free cash flow of $48 million was ahead of our plan. Our cloud transition is driving efficiency gains through progress with version consolidation and cloud-optimized releases that enhance scalability in Tyler's next-generation cloud offering. Our Cloud First strategy further strengthens the resilience and durability of our business model. We are uniquely positioned to support our clients through their cloud journey as they embrace digital modernization and integrated technologies that prioritize efficiencies, optimize workflows, improve decision-making, and provide enhanced security. Our ability to deliver exceptionally strong results and maintain a positive outlook for the balance of the year in the midst of unpredictable macro conditions illustrates the stability of our business and the resilience of our model. While we are not completely immune to the macro conditions affecting many companies, I can say that any impacts we are currently seeing, whether from cuts in federal funding for agencies, caution around spending, or potential tariffs on hardware, are minimal and just around the margins of our businesses. We are not currently seeing any fundamental changes in demand or buying behavior. The public sector market remains active, as evidenced by RFPs and sales demonstration activity that are stable at elevated levels. Some procurement processes have slowed due to two things: one, a higher number of consultant-driven processes which tend to elongate sales cycles, and two, additional scrutiny or uncertainty around the macro environment. But these are fairly isolated and represent a minority of our pipeline. The strength of our pipeline reflects the benefits of our competitive position as the industry leader, together with a unified sales organization collaborating at heightened levels to leverage our unmatched installed base, identifying secure cross-sell opportunities, and driving multi-suite deal momentum. Additionally, we continue to expand synergies across Tyler at the state level, building out sales resources with a dedicated state sales team that will serve as a strategic bridge to leverage our deep state enterprise relationships and identify and capture sales opportunities for software across Tyler. Our leadership team has experienced challenged macro environments in the past, and that experience gives us confidence in the resilience and stability of the public sector market and our business model. At the local government level, which makes up the vast majority of our revenues, budgets that support purchases from Tyler are primarily funded by property taxes, in addition to utility revenues and other locally generated sources. Revenue streams that tend to be reliable even in shifting economic environments. This funding stability supports consistent long-term demand driven by the need to replace aging, mission-critical systems that have reached end of life. At the state level, a majority of our transaction revenues come through self-funded services or user fees that do not require appropriated funds from a state budget. Most of these services, like driver's license renewals, are nondiscretionary and are generally not impacted by economic conditions. This year, the new acronym DOGE has become part of our vocabulary. While less than 5% of our revenues come from the federal government, the focus on efficiency is becoming more visible at all levels of government. We have not seen and do not currently anticipate any meaningful negative impact on our business from DOGE or similar initiatives, as the vast majority of the software and services we provide are considered essential and actually enhance efficiency. Rather than viewing these initiatives as a risk, we see opportunities in aligning with efficiency objectives such as those outlined in DOGE, which emphasize modernizing technology as a key component of maximizing governmental efficiency and productivity. In fact, section four of the executive order establishing DOGE is entitled "Modernizing Federal Technology and Software to Maximize Efficiency and Productivity" and states that the USPS administrator shall commence a software modernization initiative to improve the quality and efficiency of government-wide software, network infrastructure, and information technology systems, and that, among other things, the USDS administrator shall work with agency heads to promote interoperability between agency networks and systems. As public sector agencies manage through the challenge of aging IT infrastructure and limited resources, we are well-positioned to support their digital modernization efficiency initiatives with our cloud-based integrated software solutions. I'm pleased with the solid execution across Tyler supporting our four key growth pillars: completing our cloud transition, leveraging our large client base, growing our payments business, and expanding into new markets. I'd like to highlight a few first-quarter wins that illustrate our progress against our growth objectives. These include a full enterprise justice on-premises to cloud migration with the Cleveland, Ohio Municipal Court for approximately $800,000 in ARR. Our courts and justice team executed this SaaS flip in just one weekend following a cybersecurity incident, with operations quickly and safely restored in a new cloud environment. A five-year appraisal services privatization contract with Gwinnett County, Georgia, valued at a total of $8.7 million. A fast contract with Fulton County, Georgia, for enterprise records management representing $500,000 in ARR plus payments. This cross-sell deal leveraged our strong existing presence in Fulton County with our enterprise appraisal and tax and enterprise justice solutions. And building on our momentum from last quarter, we had seven wins for our AI-driven priority-based budgeting solution, including the cities of Dallas, Texas, Olympia, Washington, and Bloomington, Minnesota. For the quarter, we signed a total of 106 flips to the cloud of on-premises clients, with a 28% increase in total contract value from flips. In our state enterprise business, we secured three-year extensions for our digital government services with the states of Connecticut and New Mexico, representing more than $8 million in ARR. We signed 96 new payment deals across Tyler software clients, representing approximately $4.4 million in projected ARR. We also signed a five-year extension of our payment processing contract with the state of Florida, representing approximately $31 million in ARR. Now I'd like Brian to provide more detail on the results for the quarter and our annual guidance for 2025.