Thank you, Jeff. The first quarter results continued to reflect the positive impact on a year-over-year basis from the partner buyouts and improved operating margins across the portfolio. However, that was offset by the higher non-controllable expenses incurred from the early cancellation costs associated with our previous insurance policies, repairs from the December winter storm and a utility leak at one property. So overall, the net loss attributable to common stockholders was $0.21 per diluted share compared with net income of $0.62 per diluted share a year-ago. The primary reason for the year-over-year decline was the $0.70 gain in the prior-year period from the sale of a property owned by an unconsolidated subsidiary and increased interest expense from higher rates on our sub debt and usage of our credit facility. FFO was $0.28 per diluted share compared to $0.35 per diluted share a year-ago, primarily due to increased interest expense on the sub debt and credit facility and higher amortization of restricted stock and RSUs. AFFO was $0.36 per diluted share compared to $0.39 per diluted share a year-ago, primarily due to increased interest expense on the sub debt and credit facility. The higher expenses I noted earlier totaled approximately $396,000 or $0.02 per share. The increased borrowing costs year-over-year represented approximately $678,000 or $0.03 per share. With respect to the winter storm, we anticipate receiving approximately $490,000 in insurance recoveries over the next two quarters. For the combined portfolio, recurring CapEx was $1.2 million for the quarter. When you add the $558,000 in replacements that flow through real estate operating expense on our P&L, that totals approximately $1.8 million or $217 per unit. That's below the $300 per unit of replacements we have been assuming in our expense growth, included in the combined portfolio NOI guidance. We completed the rehab of 55 units during the quarter for an investment of $422,000 and an estimated annualized ROI of 43%. Non-recurring CapEx, which represents revenue enhancing and major upgrades to properties, totaled $1.2 million during the quarter. Turning to the balance sheet. Debt to enterprise value, as of March 31, was 62% compared with 59% a year-ago, primarily due to the lower market capitalization. Available liquidity at quarter end was $75 million, which is comprised of cash and availability under our credit facility. At May 1, liquidity was $73 million. As of March 31, our consolidated and unconsolidated mortgage debt had a weighted average interest rate of 4.01% and a weighted average remaining term to maturity of 7.3 years. As we noted previously, we fully paid down the $19 million of borrowings that were outstanding under our credit facility at year-end with a 10-year interest-only loan at a fixed rate of 4.45%. The substantial positive rate arbitrage, considering the current interest rate on the credit facility, is at prime. Now I'll turn the call over to Ryan.