Thanks, Mike, and good morning, everyone. To be consistent with previous reporting, as I discuss our second quarter results and exclude the impact of unrealized mark-to-market adjustments on our commodity hedges, which resulted in unrealized loss of $1.4 million for the second quarter compared to an unrealized gain of $700,000 in the prior year second quarter. Excluding these and certain other noncash items, adjusted net income for the second quarter was $139.3 million or $2.09 per common unit compared to adjusted net income of $136.9 million or $2.11 per common unit in the prior year second quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter was $175.3 million, which was flat compared to the prior year second quarter. Retail propane gallons sold in the second quarter were 161.6 million gallons, essentially unchanged compared to the prior year as the impact of colder temperatures across much of the eastern half of the country on heat-related demand, together with contributions from our recent acquisitions were offset by considerably warmer temperatures in the western half. With respect to the weather, average temperatures across our service territories during the second quarter were 6% warmer than normal and 1% warmer than the prior year. In the eastern half of the U.S., average temperatures were slightly warmer than normal and 3% colder than the prior year second quarter, whereas average temperatures in the West were 22% warmer than normal and 17% warmer than the prior year second quarter. From a commodity perspective, propane inventory levels in the U.S. experienced a seasonal decline during the second quarter, but remained well above historical averages for this time of year. At the end of the second quarter, U.S. propane inventories were at 77 million barrels, which were 75% higher than March 2025 levels and 47% higher than the five-year average for March. Given the increase in inventories and other factors, average wholesale propane prices for the quarter of $0.69 per gallon, basis Mont Belvieu decreased 23% compared to the prior year second quarter. Although average propane prices for the second quarter were lower than the prior year, prices have evolved and have recently begun to rise due to the conflict in Iran and the resulting disruption in global energy markets. At the end of February, just before the start of the conflict, spot propane prices were in the mid-$0.60 per gallon range, whereas most recently, spot prices have risen to the $0.90 per gallon range. Excluding the impact of the noncash mark-to-market adjustments on our commodity hedges that I mentioned earlier, total gross margins of $345.1 million for the second quarter increased $500,000 compared to the prior year second quarter, primarily due to a slight increase in propane unit margins of $0.03 per gallon or 1.7%. As Mike mentioned, following the publication of proposed treasury regulations in February 2026, which provided sufficient clarity for us to conclude that the production and sales of our RNG qualified for production tax credits under Section 45Z, we recognized $3.5 million of PTCs earned on D3 RNG injections at our Stanfield, Arizona facility for the period from January 2025 through March 2026. The benefit was reported as a reduction to operating expenses and included a catch-up adjustment of $2 million for credits related to fiscal 2025 and $800,000 related to the first quarter of fiscal 2026. With that said, combined operating and G&A expenses of $169.5 million for the quarter were flat compared to the prior year second quarter as higher payroll and benefit-related expenses along with higher fuel and vehicle maintenance costs, driven by elevated activity levels to meet stronger customer demand in the Eastern territories and an increase in accruals for self-insurance matters were offset by the recognition of production tax credits and a $2.9 million insurance recovery related to the partial settlement of certain claims associated with our RNG acquisition in December 2022. Net interest expense of $19.7 million for the quarter decreased 4.2% compared to the prior year second quarter, resulting from a lower level of average outstanding borrowings under our revolving credit facility and lower benchmark interest rates on revolver borrowings. Total capital spending for the quarter of $24.7 million was $5.4 million higher than the prior year second quarter, primarily due to the construction efforts at our Columbus, Ohio and Upstate New York RNG facilities. On a year-to-date basis, our total growth CapEx for our RNG facilities totaled $19 million, and our full-year capital spending estimate for the existing projects is $35 million to $40 million. Turning to our balance sheet. During the second quarter, we utilized excess cash flows from operating activities to repay $64.3 million of borrowings under the revolver. Our consolidated leverage ratio for the trailing 12-month period ended March 2026 improved to 4.34x compared to 4.54x for March 2025 with an increase in adjusted EBITDA of $6 million and total debt reduction of $32.3 million. We have now moved through our historically high period of seasonal working capital needs into the fiscal quarters we expect to generate excess cash flows. We will continue to remain focused on utilizing excess cash flows to strengthen the balance sheet as opportunities arise to fund strategic growth, including the remaining growth capital for our RNG platform. We have more than ample borrowing capacity under our revolver to support our capital expansion plans and ongoing strategic growth initiatives. With that, I'll turn the call back to Mike.