Thanks John and good afternoon, everyone. As highlighted in our press release, performance for the third quarter was in line with expectations with revenue near the high end of our guidance range, including a small contribution from a labor disruption. Consolidated revenue for the third quarter of $315 million was down 7% sequentially and 29% over the prior year, driven primarily by the expected declines in Travel, Nurse and Allied. I'll get into more details on the segments in just a few minutes. Gross profit for the quarter was $64 million, which represented a gross margin of 20.4%. Gross margin was down 40 basis points sequentially and 160 basis points over the prior year, primarily as a result of bill pay spread compression in our travel business. Year-over-year, margin compression also reflects the impact from higher burdens such as health and workers comp within nurse and ally. Specific to the bill pay spread and travel, it's worth noting that overall pay rates continue to decline faster than bill rates, but the cost of housing and benefits continues to mask that trend. Moving down the income statement selling general and administrative expense was $54 million, down 10% sequentially and 22% over the prior year. The majority of the decrease relates to lower salary and benefit costs associated with the reductions in headcount taken since early 2023, as well as efficiencies realized from the ongoing leverage of certain operational and middle office processes in our offshore location. As previously mentioned, we've been proactive in managing our costs in order to align with the broader market while preserving capacity and funding investments in parts of the business where we're seeing opportunities for organic growth. Coming into the fourth quarter, we reduced our investment in headcount by another 4%, which will drive approximately $2 million per quarter in savings. As a percent of revenue, SG&A was 17% for the quarter, down approximately 50 basis points sequentially. Adjusted EBITDA of $10 million for the quarter represented a margin of 3.3%, reflecting the decline in operating leverage from lower revenue and the gross margin pressure. Heading into the fourth quarter, we believe that our adjusted EBITDA margin will be closer to 4% as we continue to manage costs and as our higher margin education business benefits from the return to school interest expense was $550,000, related primarily to the carrying costs for our ABL and fees related to outstanding letters of credit. Given our significant cash position, we recognized nearly $1 million in interest income in the quarter and expect similar interest income again for the fourth quarter, depending on capital allocation decisions. I'll go more into more detail in just a few minutes. And finally, on the income statement, income tax expense was $800,000 net of some discrete items recognized in the quarter, representing an effective tax rate of 24.6%. Our overall performance resulted in adjusted earnings per share of $0.12, which was at the high end of the guidance range, primarily as a result of several factors including lower stock compensation, the impact from discrete tax benefits, as well as fewer shares outstanding. Turning to the segments, Nurse and Allied reported revenue of $265 million, down 9% sequentially and 33% from the prior year. Travel, our largest business within Nurse and allied, was down 11% sequentially and 41% from the prior year, driven primarily by a decline in professionals on assignment and to a lesser extent, the normalization in bill rates. As John highlighted, the travel staffing market continues to show signs of nearing an inflection, with orders rising again as we enter the fourth quarter and open order rates remaining stable. Our local or per diem business reported better than expected results as a result of the labor disruption that we mentioned a moment ago. Similar to travel, our local business has been impacted by the broader market softness, though it continues to stabilize, with billable hours declining at a slower pace than we've experienced in prior quarters. Also, within Nurse and Allied, our home care staffing business was up 4% sequentially and 13% over the prior year. Fueled by a number of recent PACE program wins, we believe this business is poised for continued organic growth. Education was down 6% from the prior year and 37% sequentially due solely to the timing of school calendars. Finally, physician staffing reported $50 million in revenue, which was up 10% over the prior year and 4% sequentially. Billable days were up 1% sequentially and 6% over the prior year, with price and favorable mix accounting for the rest of the increases. Turning to the Balance Sheet, we ended the third quarter with $64 million in cash and no outstanding debt. With the help of our balance sheet and strong cash flow, we remain well positioned to fund growth initiatives and execute on our capital allocation strategy. Before turning to cash flows, I just want to note that you'll see a small non-cash correction to the 2023 balance sheet contained in the press release. During the quarter, we discovered that a revenue elimination entry was not recorded in prior years prior to 2023 and as a result a liability was understated. As I said, this was a noncash event and had no effect on clients, contractors or clinicians. From a cash flow perspective, we generated $7.5 million in cash from operations during the quarter and $96 million for the 9 months. Our DSO this quarter was 61 days, in line with our stated goal of 60 days. One other comment on cash mops I'd like to make is that given the new ERP system we are implementing as cloud-based, the majority of the capitalized costs are treated as an outflow on cash from operations. Excluding the ERP project, cash flow from operations would have been approximately $10 million for this quarter. Cash used in investing activities was $1 million, primarily reflecting capitalized technology investments to expand functionalities and features for Intellify. Cash used in financing activities included the repurchase of more than 800,000 shares at an aggregate cost of $12 million. With the decline in our receivables, we have a borrowing base of approximately $150 million under our $300 million ABL and though we will purchase some shares under our 10b5-1 plan in the fourth quarter, we'll likely seek to preserve the bulk of our available cash to fund strategic investments. And this brings me to our outlook for the fourth quarter, guidance revenue of between $300 million and $310 million, representing a sequential decline of 2% to 5%. This range reflects the labor disruption in the third quarter that is not expected to recur, as well as the return to school impact from our education business. The travel and local businesses are expected to see low to mid-single-digit declines in billable hours, and a modest improvement in bill rates. We're guiding to an adjusted EBITDA range of between $11 million and $13 million, representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately. Adjusted earnings per share is expected to be between $0.10 and $0.14 based on an average share count of approximately 32.4 million shares. Also assumed in our guidance is a gross margin of 21%, net interest income of $300,000, depreciation and amortization of $5 million, stock-based compensation of $1.4 million, and a tax provision of approximately $2 million. And that concludes our prepared remarks, and we'd now like to open the lines for questions. Operator?