Thanks Farrell, and good morning everyone. Beginning with our Q2 2020 performance update, IRT recorded net income available to common shareholders of $789,000, down from net income of $14.7 million in the second quarter of 2019, the latter of which benefited from a $12.1 million net gain on the sale of assets. During Q2, Core FFO grew to $18 million, up 6.8% from $16.9 million in Q2 2019. Core FFO per share during Q2 was $0.19 in line with Q2 2019. Turning to our same-store property operating results, NOI growth was 1.2% in the quarter driven by revenue growth of 1.7%. Rental rates. These profits increase year-over-year with an average monthly rent of $1,091 this quarter, up 4% since Q2 last year. While this includes value-add communities, we did see rental rate growth at our non- value-add same-store communities with rental rates in Q2 increasing 2.8% over the prior year. During the second quarter of 2020, as a result of COVID-19 pandemic, we recorded a provision for bad debt aggregating $723,000. Of this amount, $690,000 are related to the 54 same-store portfolio. This provision represented 1.4% of total second quarter revenue, net debt totaled $751,000 in the second quarter of 2020 compared to $337,000 in Q1 2020 and $236,000 in Q2 2019. Excluding this bad debt reserve, we would have delivered rental and other property revenue growth of 3.1% in the second quarter versus 1.7% as reported. Furthermore, the bad debt provision, we recorded reduces the future risk of any bill to revenue that we have not yet collected for Q2. To put it in context, we ended the quarter with $1.4 million of gross receivables including those receivables that are part of our deferred payment plans offered to residents. Subsequent to June 30, we've collected $333,000 of these gross receivables in July and after considering the bad debt provision, our net accounts receivable leftover from Q2 is $355,000 about a third of a penny per share. We believe that we are adequately reserved and feel good about collecting those remaining net receivables. On the property operating expense side, same-store operating expenses increased 2.3% in Q2 2020, with higher property taxes and property insurance expense offset by lower maintenance cost and other expenses. Our non-controllable cost consisting of property taxes and property insurance, which was renewed during Q2 increased 6.7% while our controllable cost consisting of all other categories of operating expenses decreased 20 basis points. This reflects our ongoing initiatives to tightly manage our cost structure, when and where appropriate, particularly during these uncertain times. Turning to our balance sheet as of June 30, our liquidity position was $248 million, we had $11.7 million of unrestricted cash, approximately $137 million of additional capacity through our unsecured credit facility and $99 million of remaining proceeds from our forward equity rates. Subsequent to quarter end, we used our unsecured line of credits to prepay without penalty. $33.1 million dollars of property level debt with a weighted average interest cost of 3.9%. This saves us close to $700,000 of interest cost a year when compared to the interest rate on our line of credit, which is 1.6% today. We closed the second quarter carrying just over $1 billion of debt. With no significant debt maturities until 2023, our normalized net debt to adjusted EBITDA was 9.2 times at the end of the quarter. Clearly, the increased bad debt expense was the main driver of the increase from 9 to 9.2 times this quarter. If we use the remaining proceeds from our forward equity raise to delever, our net debt to adjusted EBITDA were decreased to 8.2 times. Regarding our dividend program, IRTs Board of Directors declared a quarterly cash dividend of 12 cents per share, which equates to a 71% payout ratio on 17 cents of AFFO for Q2. As mentioned last quarter, the retention of capital from the revised dividend now puts us more in line with our peer group on a dividend payout ratio basis and gives us more financial flexibility with the potential to allow for accelerated deleveraging. With respect to guidance, we believe it is prudent to keep it suspended at this time and anticipate resuming the practice of providing a full-year guidance when there is sufficient clarity on the economic conditions. With that said, let me summarize a few key assumptions that have implications for the second half of this year. First, we will continue to prioritize resident retention and occupancy while driving rent growth where appropriate. Two, we plan to continue our cost mitigation efforts, which will include lower controllable operating expenses than we initially guided earlier this year. Three, we will assess any future cap recycling activity with the intend to redeploy cash or explore asset sales, as opportunities arise and four, we expect a lower interest rate environment and therefore lower interest expense in the second half of this year. I'd now like to turn the call back to Scott. Scott?