Thanks, Colin. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining our call. While PBF's second quarter was a marked improvement over the prior few quarters, we definitively see constructive tailwinds ahead, specifically on the crude side. The Martinez refinery was partially restarted in late April, and now with much better discovery, we are working towards a full restart by the end of this year. The work our team in Martinez is doing is commendable. They continue to work diligently to maintain safe operations and produce much needed products for the California market, while at the same time, managing the significant project to restore full operations. The rest of our refining system has largely operated to plan. Second quarter product margins were supported by strong demand, while the light-heavy crude differentials continuing to be a significant challenge. Close to 4 million barrels of medium and heavy crude were taken off the market between 2022 and 2023 timeframe. Based on announcements to-date and projecting forward, we should see between 2 million and 2.5 million barrels per day coming back by this autumn, which will coincide with seasonal refinery maintenance. With this, we expect to see light-heavy spreads widen out as we move deeper into the third and fourth quarters. Looking ahead, the product markets are looking attractive. Distillate in particular, looks quite strong. Global distillate supply/demand balances remain in deficit and with long inventory, distillate crack should remain supported. With already high refinery utilization, it will be difficult for distillates to restock with continuing strong demand. Longer term, we continue to see incremental product demand growth exceeding net refining capacity additions. Recent research indicated only approximately 500,000 barrels a day of net refinery capacity additions in 2025. This does not keep up with growing global demand. And as we have seen, capacity rationalization can happen quickly and unexpectedly. We are seeing more rationalizations than expected in 2025 and 2026 with fewer new additions as we look further out. Europe recently lost 113,000 barrel a day Lindsey refinery in the U.K., and we still have the pending shutdowns of Phillips 66 Los Angeles and Valero's Benicia plant over the next 10 months or so. This is a constructive setup for the global refining environment. PBF remains focused on controlling the aspects of our business that we can control. As Mike will update shortly, I'm very pleased with our progress on the business improvement initiatives that we've initiated. This effort will result in improved efficiency and reliability across our system, which should, in turn, drive superior refining performance. To be successful and enhance value for our investors, we must operate safely, must operate reliably and responsibly, but we must do it as efficiently as possible. With that, I'll turn the call over to Mike Bukowski for comments on operations.