Thanks, Jeff, and good morning, everyone. Let's start with some of our leasing and development activity from this past quarter and then get into more of the details and what we're seeing with acquisitions and dispositions. We executed 47 deals in the second quarter for a total of 506,000 square feet, and of those 47 deals, 41 were shop deals, 22 new leases, and 19 renewals. The 22 new leases represent an all-time quarter high at Urban Edge and are a direct result of the heavy lifting we've done with anchor vacancies over the past several years. Anchored tenant leasing remains both the best leading indicator of and the best tool for effective shop leasing. Our shop average new lease cash spread of 19% would not have been possible without some of the anchors we've brought to our properties, including ShopRite, TJ Maxx, and Aldi. Shop occupancy has now reached 90%, and with a third quarter pipeline that looks just as robust as second quarter, we remain on track to surpass 91% shop occupancy by the end of the year. The 140 basis point gain in shop leasing from last quarter and 520 basis point gain in shop leasing from last year has helped push our overall same property lease occupancy rate up by another 30 basis points to 96.5%. Vacancy remains at historic lows and it's moving lower, and foot traffic at our properties is up almost 7% in the second quarter compared to the prior year. A good example of the current demand landscape is Stop & Shop's recent announcement that they will be closing 32 stores. Of the four Stop & Shops in our portfolio, two are exceptional performers. One is a very strong store with term through 2029, and the fourth, the only one in our portfolio on the closure list is a lower tier store in need of renovation with an expiring lease. We received multiple inbound inquiries on that space. When Stop & Shop let us know they'd be closing that store, we quickly identified the best replacement grocer, and we negotiated a deal with no capital and no downtime. We hope to have a lease executed in the next 30 days, well before the Stop & Shop lease expiration early next year. The one new anchor lease signed in the quarter is with BJ's Wholesale Club at Bruckner Commons. That lease was signed in June, and at the same time, we entered into a lease termination agreement with Target at the same property. We cannot get into any of the specifics of the Target termination agreement, the terms of which are confidential, but what we can say is that while there are changes in timing and differences in square footage, rents, and capital for each of those two leases, the overall initial return on cost for each one is comparable, and the BJ's contractual lease term is 20 years, twice as long as Target's. The simultaneous execution speaks volumes to the excellence of our UE team and to the demand for our real estate. We believe BJ's is a great addition to the Bruckner community, and we look forward to building on our leasing momentum at this dominant retail destination. We also continue to execute our low-risk business plan of building out space for signed leases at other properties. In June, we completed the second phase of our Huntington Commons project on Long Island, which included adding a Burlington and repositioning many of the shop tenants with necessity-based uses, like urgent care, salon, and fitness. We also activated two development projects, a First Watch restaurant at Bergen Town Center and a ground-lease bank pad at Woodmore Town Center. Both of these projects are a perfect example of the state of the market today, as we leased a raw shell space that had been vacant for nearly a decade and an unused pad that had sat empty since the property was built, to credit tenants at double-digit development yields. Again, our overall $170 million development pipeline is expected to generate a 15% yield on cost, and it is 90% comprised of projects tied to signed leases. Jeff touched a little on the state of the acquisition market, so let me just add a little more color there. The REITs have been active buyers in 2024, and we are no exception, having already bought $426 million of assets since October of last year at what in hindsight, looks like very attractive returns. Prices have gone up since those deals, but we still see value in the types of assets we want to acquire; large, dominant, surface-parked retail with a mix of power and grosser tenancy in our core markets. We have four assets totaling about $350 million with those characteristics under heavy diligence at the moment. On the flip side, as interest rates and cap rates continue to move down, our high-credit, stable cash flow, single-tenant assets are attracting more attention from triple-net and 1031 buyers. We are in the market with three of those assets right now as potential capital sources. Our team is extremely busy, and while it is early on both the buys and the sells, we believe we can close out 2024 with more of what we did in 2023 and the first half of 2024; selling in the fives and acquiring in the sevens while enhancing portfolio quality. I will now turn it over to our Chief Financial Officer, Mark Langer.