Thanks, Bruce, and good afternoon, everyone. In the first quarter, consolidated revenue increased 4% to $97.7 million compared to $93.6 million in the same year-ago quarter. The increase was due to strong growth across our concrete waste management service in the UK operations. As Bruce mentioned, this growth was offset by a decrease in volumes in US Concrete Pumping due to the harsh winter weather events experienced across the United States primarily in the month of January. Revenue in our US Concrete Pumping segment, mostly operating under the Brundage-Bone brand decreased 1% to $66.7 million compared to $67.2 million in the prior year quarter. The decrease was due to weather impacts in January as the severe winter temperatures and freezing rainfall solve many of our customers' projects. We estimate the extreme weather lowered the expected revenue volume of our US Concrete Pumping work by approximately $7 million in January. For our UK operations, operating largely under the Camfaud brand, revenue improved 21.2% to $15.4 million compared to $12.7 million in the same year-ago quarter. Excluding the impact from foreign currency translation, revenue was up 16% year over year. The increase was primarily due to pricing improvements and operating efficiencies. Revenue in our US concrete waste management services segment, operating under the Eco-Pan brand increased 14.2% to $15.6 million compared to $13.7 million in the prior year quarter. The increase was driven by strong organic growth and pricing improvements, notwithstanding the first quarter growth rate being hampered by unseasonably harsh January winter weather. Returning to our consolidated results, gross margin in the first quarter was 34.1% compared to 39% in the same year-ago quarter with a decreased margin primarily related to the weather impacted lower revenue volume and downstream lower equipment and headcount utilization as a result of the extreme winter weather as well as inflationary increases in insurance costs. General and administrative expenses in the first quarter were $31.9 million compared to $27 million in the same year-ago quarter. The increase was primarily due to higher headcount and wage inflation and a nonrecurring $3.5 million charge as a result of a sales tax rule change dispute in our West region. Excluding the $3.5 million charge, G&A costs as a percent of revenue increased slightly in the first quarter to 29.1% compared to 28.9% in the same year-ago quarter due to the lower revenue volume. Net loss available to common shareholders in the first quarter decreased to $4.3 million, or $0.08 per diluted share compared to net income of $6 million or $0.11 per diluted share in the same year-ago quarter. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA in the first quarter decreased to $19.3 million compared to $25 million in the same year-ago quarter. Adjusted EBITDA margin declined to 19.7% compared to 26.8% in the same year-ago quarter. Again, EBITDA decline were driven by the aforementioned impacts from extreme US weather condition and an increase in labor and insurance costs. In our US Concrete Pumping business, adjusted EBITDA decreased to $10.7 million compared to $16.8 million in the same year-ago quarter. In our UK business, adjusted EBITDA increased 32.8% to $3.2 million compared to $2.4 million in the same year-ago quarter. For our US concrete waste management services business, adjusted EBITDA decreased slightly to $5.4 million compared to $5.8 million in the same year-ago quarter due to the downstream winter weather impact on labor utilization. Turning to liquidity, at January 31, 2024, we had a total debt outstanding of $388 million, our net debt of $373.3 million. This equates to a net debt to EBITDA leverage ratio of 3.1 times. We had approximately $217 million of liquidity as of January 31, 2024, which includes cash on the balance sheet and availability from our ABL facility. As a reminder, we have no near-term debt maturities with our Senior Notes maturing in 2026 and our asset-based lending facility maturing in 2028. We remain in a strong liquidity position, which provides the ability to responsibly pursue value added investment opportunities like accretive M&A or the organic investment in our fleet of equipment to support our overall long-term growth strategy. During the third quarter of 2022, we entered into a share repurchase program that authorized the buyback of up to $10 million of our outstanding shares of common stock. In 2023, the Board of Directors approved an additional $10 million increase, and in March of 2024, an additional $15 million was approved. During the first quarter of 2024, under our share repurchase program, we repurchased approximately 36,000 shares of our common stock for $248,000 or an average price of $6.88 per share. Since our buyback program was initiated, we have repurchased approximately 1.8 million shares of our common stock for a total of $11.8 million or an average price of $6.61 per share. The current share buyback program was $23.2 million remaining as authorized by the Board of Directors through March of 2025. And we believe this demonstrates both our commitment to delivering long-term value to shareholders and our confidence in our strategic growth plan. Moving now to our 2024 full year guidance due to the weather impacted year-to-date start in fiscal 2024, we have revised our expectations for fiscal year revenue to range between $460 million and $480 million and adjusted EBITDA to range between $122 million and $130 million. The target guidance for free cash flow, which we define as adjusted EBITDA, less net replacement CapEx and less cash paid for interest will remain unchanged as at least $75 million. This reflects our ability to control CapEx investments given the current utilization capacity in our fleet due to the previous investments over the last three years, including acquisitions to improve the age of our fleet. Operationally and financially, we continue to have a solid foundation and we have confidence in continuing to execute our growth strategy. With that, I will now turn the call back over to Bruce.