Thanks, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. 2024 has started in much the same way that 2023 finished with all 3 of our operating components, leasing, development and investment activity, firing on all cylinders. Let's get into some of the details. First, on the acquisitions and dispositions front. Jeff highlighted the significant volumes we've closed since October 2023, with $426 million of purchases and $356 million of dispositions. With all of these transactions, we've acquired stronger assets for our business in markets we know well at yields that are 200 basis points higher than what we sold. But beyond the math and accretion of these deals, the assets we acquired this quarter, like the Boston assets we acquired last year, continue our theme, a simple business plan grounded in strong tenancy, first ring locations and large controllable land parcels acquired below land and below building replacement cost. We believe these assets will continue to provide the best opportunity for Urban Edge, given the attractive going-in cap rates, a limited buyer pool, strong tenant credit profile and our ability to extract value. Our newest acquisition, Ledgewood Commons and Ledgewood, New Jersey is a perfect example. It sits on over 50 acres at the best intersection in the trade area, and it's anchored by Walmart Supercenter, Marshalls in Burlington and includes shop tenants like Starbucks, Chipotle, Ulta and J.Crew. Like the Heritage Square property we acquired in February, we own all the outparcels at Ledgewood Commons, including 2 currently vacant pads that we will develop. With a going-in cap rate of 7.9%, embedded growth from shop leasing and outparcel development and the great financing that we procured will generate double-digit levered returns on this property, exceptional for a Walmart-anchored asset in any economic cycle. We'd love to find more assets like Ledgewood, and our team is busy evaluating anything that could be a fit. The current interest rate volatility greatly benefits buyers like us who are both well capitalized and highly trusted by sellers, brokers and lenders. I believe we are at the top of that list in our markets. On the leasing side, we've executed 44 deals for a total of 805,000 square feet, a very strong first quarter pace. Of those 44 deals, 17 were new leases with an average spread of 23%, a result we believe of the strong leasing fundamentals we've been talking about now for several quarters. Our same-property lease occupancy rate increased by 30 basis points from the prior quarter and now sits at 96.2% with anchor lease occupancy at nearly 98% and shop occupancy up 70 basis points since last quarter to 88.4%. As we mentioned at the beginning of the year, we are laser-focused on increasing our shop occupancy back to and above our historical high watermark of 91%. We are on track to achieve this goal in 2024, perhaps even by the end of the third quarter based on shop leases currently in negotiations. These deals are coming from all industries, including food and beverage, medical, health and beauty and apparel. They are a byproduct of both market conditions and the heavy lifting we've done with anchor repositioning in the past several years. And while our anchor occupancy of 98% is already healthy, we have good visibility to improving not only this percentage, but the quality of some of our anchors by the end of 2024. And finally, on the development side, we continue to execute on a very simple and low-risk business plan of building out space for committed leases, delivering 1 anchor space this past quarter at our Yonkers Gateway asset. Our $166 million development pipeline is 90% comprised from signed leases and will generate an expected 15% unlevered yield on cost. So that's the what and the how of the quarter. As to why our business is so strong right now, I think there are a couple of reasons. First, we've talked for several quarters now about shopping center fundamentals. Vacancy remains at historic lows. -- store openings continue to outpace store closures and new retail construction is virtually nonexistent in our markets. These market conditions put upward pressure on market rents and allow us to extract better terms in our leases. But the second reason we're so optimistic about our business plan is one of the key points of differentiation about Urban Edge. Our portfolio has an average property size of almost 20 acres and 215,000 square feet. Based on our current stock price, that is a value of approximately $2 million per acre or $215 per built square foot, numbers that are significantly below current land values and current building replacement costs. As we continue to build a portfolio of assets with similar attributes, like Shoppers World and Gateway Center in Boston and now with our acquisition of Ledgewood Commons, we believe we are positioning this company extremely well for the long term. A low building basis and intrinsic land value in highly supply-constrained markets will allow us to push rents and accretively redevelop and expand our assets. We are seeing some of the fruits of that labor in 2024 and 2025 and the opportunities for growth in a portfolio like this should extend well into the future. I will now turn it over to our Chief Financial Officer, Mark Langer.