Thank you, Tom. Good morning, everyone. I'll begin on Slide 6. As Tom mentioned, today we announced breakeven results for the three months ended September 30th, 2024. For the first nine months of the year, net income was $31.5 million, or $1.96 per share, an increase of $0.11 per share compared to the corresponding period in 2023. Earnings growth reflects higher adjusted electric and gas margin, partially offset by higher operating expenses. We have also reported adjusted net income and EPS amounts, which exclude the effect of certain Bangor transaction costs recognized in operation and maintenance expense, and as Tom mentioned, do not reflect ongoing operating performance. Adjusted earnings per share was $0.02 per share in the third quarter and $2 per share for the first nine months of the year. Turning to Slide 7, I will discuss our electric and gas adjusted gross margin. I'll begin with our electric operations. Electric adjusted gross margin was $81.7 million for the nine months ended September 30th, 2024, an increase of $1.6 million as compared to the same period of 2023. The increase in electric adjusted gross margin reflects higher distribution rates and customer growth. The company added approximately 1,100 new electric customers compared to the same period in 2023, and as noted during prior calls, electric distribution revenues are substantially decoupled, which eliminates the dependency of distribution revenue on the volume of electricity sales. Moving to gas operations. Gas adjusted gross margin was $115.6 million for the nine months ended September 30th, 2024, an increase of $9.2 million compared to the same period in 2023. The increase in gas adjusted gross margin reflects higher distribution rates and customer growth. The company added approximately 720 new gas customers compared to the same period in 2023, approximately 60% of the company's gas customers are under decoupled rates, and through the first nine months of the year, we estimate the decoupling supported gas margin by approximately $0.20 per share. Moving to Slide 8, we provide an earnings bridge comparing year-to-date 2024 results to 2023. As I just mentioned, adjusted gross margin for the first nine months of the year increased by $10.8 million, primarily driven by higher distribution rates and customer growth. Operation and maintenance expenses increased $1.1 million, reflecting higher labor costs and higher utility operating costs, as well as transaction costs associated with the Bangor Natural Gas acquisition. This increase of approximately 2% in operation and maintenance expenses is below the increase in inflation of approximately 2.4% over the same period. Depreciation and amortization increased $5.1 million, reflecting higher levels of utility plant and service, higher depreciation rates approved in recent Maine and Massachusetts rate orders, and higher amortization of storm costs and other deferred costs. Taxes other than income taxes increased $1.5 million, reflecting higher local property taxes on higher utility plant and service, as well as higher payroll taxes. Interest expense increased $1 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. Other expense increased by $0.2 million, largely due to higher retirement benefit costs. And lastly, income taxes increased $0.1 million, reflecting higher pre-tax earnings. Turning to Slide 9. As Tom previously noted, we recently filed an uncontested settlement with FERC for Granite State Gas Transmission, our interstate gas pipeline, requesting approval by November 25th, 2024, for rates effective November 1st, 2024. The settlement agreement includes an annual revenue increase of $3 million, which represents an increase of approximately 30% to Granite's current revenues. The settlement includes three limited Section 4 step filings over the next three years, totaling approximately $30 million to recover eligible capital costs. This multi-year rate plan will increase rates each September for the next three years, beginning in 2025. We are pleased with the outcome of this settlement, which should provide Granite State Gas Transmission with the opportunity to earn a reasonable return for the next few years. Moving to Slide 10. As we discussed last quarter, in July, the company agreed to acquire Bangor Natural Gas from Hope Utilities, and we are currently working through the regulatory approval proceeding before the Maine Public Utilities Commission. Deliberations are currently scheduled for early February, and we expect this transaction should close by the end of the first quarter of 2025. Bangor Natural Gas is a great complement to our current natural gas distribution operations in Maine. Bangor Natural Gas has experienced strong historical customer growth, and we believe the combination of low penetration rates, cold climate, and constructive regulatory jurisdiction will allow Bangor to continue to deliver affordable natural gas to its customers. We will provide additional updates regarding this transaction on our next earnings call. Turning to Slide 11. Our investment outlook remains strong, and our projected capital spending through 2028 totals approximately $910 million. As previously discussed, there remains additional upside to our capital plan for electric sector modernization projects as we invest in supporting the clean energy transition. Since 2017, our rate-based growth has been 7.9%, outpacing the midpoint of our long-run growth guidance of 6.5% to 8.5%. I'd like to mention the great progress that has been made at our Kingston Solar Facility. In August, site work was completed and facility construction commenced. We expect that the project will be placed in service during the second quarter of 2025. We will seek regulatory recovery upon completion and continue to look for opportunities that provide similar benefits to customers. Consistent with prior years, we anticipate providing an update to our investment plan during the fourth quarter earnings call. Moving to Slide 12, our balance sheet is strong, and we anticipate that operating cash flows, less dividends, will fund the majority of our investment plan with additional financing obtained from a mix of debt and equity. Maintaining our strong balance sheet and investment-grade credit ratings is key to our financing strategy, and we believe our low-risk cash flow generation compares favorably to our peers. In August, we successfully closed on $135 million of long-term debt at competitive rates across Unitil Corporation and all of our utility subsidiaries. These transactions recapitalized our short-term debt balance and reduced interest rate volatility. I'll now turn the call back over to Tom.