Thank you, Tom. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin on Slide 5. As Tom mentioned, today we announced first quarter net income of $27.2 million or $1.69 per share. Net income increased $3.1 million or $0.18 per share compared to the same period in 2023, representing approximately 12% growth in earnings per share. In Maine, our only non-decoupled service area, weather negatively affected earnings by approximately $0.02 per share compared to 2023 and by approximately $0.10 per share compared to normal weather conditions. Despite the unseasonably warm weather, we are pleased with the earnings growth we achieved, which was largely driven by the successful rate case outcome in Maine and our disciplined approach to cost management. Turning to Slide 6. I will discuss our Electric and Gas adjusted gross margins. Beginning with Electric operations, for the 3 months ended March 31, 2024, Electric adjusted gross margin was $27.1 million, an increase of $0.4 million or 1.5% compared to the same period in 2023. The increase in Electric adjusted gross margin reflects higher distribution rates and customer growth with a year-over-year increase of approximately 500 customers. As a reminder, the company's Electric distribution revenues are substantially decoupled, which eliminates the dependency of distribution revenue on the volume of electricity sales. Moving to Gas operations. For the 3 months ended March 31, 2024, Gas adjusted gross margin was $61 million, an increase of $6.1 million or approximately 11% compared to the same period in 2023. The increase in Gas adjusted gross margin reflects higher distribution rates and customer growth, partially offset by warmer winter weather. In Maine, weather-normalized unit sales increased 0.3% year-over-year. Based on weather data collected in the company's Maine service area, this quarter was one of the warmest winter periods over the past 50 years. However, approximately 60% of the company's gas customers are under decoupled rates, which mitigates the effects that lower sales due to warmer weather have on a portion of our gas distribution revenue. Higher gas adjusted gross margin for the 3 months ended March 31, 2024, is in large part due to the recent Maine rate case and the new rates that took effect on October 1, 2023, as well as a year-over-year increase of approximately 1,100 gas customers. One additional note for Gas adjusted gross margin. New distribution rates recently took effect on May 1, 2024, for the company's gas infrastructure replacement programs in both Maine and Massachusetts, providing combined rate relief of approximately $4.3 million on an annual basis. Moving to Slide 7. We provide an earnings bridge comparing 2024 first quarter results to the same period in 2023. As I just discussed, first quarter adjusted gross margin increased $6.5 million, primarily as a result of higher distribution rates and customer growth, partially offset by warmer winter weather in 2024. Operation and maintenance expenses increased $0.1 million due to higher utility operating costs. This nominal increase in operation and maintenance expenses is well below the increase in inflation over the same period. While we did experience storm events in the first few months of the year, we have storm recovery mechanisms in both Massachusetts and New Hampshire that mitigate the effect of storm costs on earnings. Depreciation and amortization increased by $1.3 million, reflecting higher levels of utility plant in service and higher amortization of storm and other deferred costs. Taxes other than income taxes increased by $0.4 million due to higher local property taxes on higher utility plant in service and higher payroll taxes. Interest expense increased $0.2 million reflecting higher interest expense on short-term borrowings and higher levels of long-term debt, partially offset by higher interest income on regulatory assets and higher allowance for funds used during construction. Other expense increased by $0.3 million, largely due to higher retirement benefit costs. And lastly, income taxes increased $1.1 million, reflecting higher pretax earnings in 2024. Turning to Slide 8. Our Fitchburg Electric and Gas base rate proceedings are progressing as expected, and we expect to receive orders in these cases in late June. We concluded evidentiary hearings in the first quarter, and we anticipate new base distribution rates will become effective on July 1. The requested gross revenue increase is approximately $6.8 million for the Electric division and $11.2 million for the Gas division. The final revenue increases are expected to be net of certain revenues that are currently collected through capital trackers. We have proposed the inclusion of $2.7 million and $4.2 million of Electric and Gas revenues, respectively, in base rates, which were previously recovered through capital trackers. After these amounts, the net revenue increase would be approximately $4.1 million for the Electric division and $7 million for the Gas division. As a reminder, we proposed a 5-year performance-based rate making plans for both the Electric and Gas divisions. We look forward to providing additional updates regarding these rate cases during our next earnings call. Moving to Slide 9. As noted during our previous earnings call, we recently submitted our Electric sector modernization plan in support of Massachusetts climate goals. Evidentiary hearings regarding the company's plan and the plans of other Massachusetts utilities recently concluded. Our plan highlights the substantial investments that will be necessary to support the Commonwealth goals and outlined certain projects that represent approximately $43 million in capital spending through 2028, a portion of which would be incremental to our current capital investment plan. Moving to Slide 10. Our capital investment plan for 2024 is progressing as planned. As noted during our prior earnings call, our projected 5-year investment plan totaled $910 million, an increase of approximately 47% over the prior 5 years. Our thoughtful approach to prudent system investment informs the capital investment plan, and we believe that this approach will enable continued stable rate base growth within the range of 6.5% to 8.5%. We continue to expect operating cash flows less dividends to fund the vast majority of our financing plan with the remaining financing needs met through a combination of debt and equity. Our financing plan will maintain our strong balance sheet and support our investment grade credit ratings. Now turning to Slide 11. We continue to maintain investment-grade credit ratings through our focus on responsibly managing the balance sheet and generating strong cash flows. Our current borrowing levels and short-term rates were higher than the first quarter of 2023 resulting in approximately $1 million of higher short-term and long-term interest expense. Net interest expense only increased by $0.2 million. As you can see from the chart on this slide, approximately 80% of our short-term debt balance is offset by carrying charges on construction balances and regulatory deferrals. Later this year, we expect to recapitalize portions of our short-term debt with long-term debt to reduce interest rate volatility and enhance our liquidity profile by reducing the outstanding balance on our credit facility. Maintaining our strong balance sheet and our investment-grade credit ratings remain a top priority, and we believe we compare favorably to other utility companies on certain credit metrics such as FFO to debt. I will now turn the call back over to Tom.