Thank you, Beth. Good afternoon, everyone. Building on Beth's remarks, I'm pleased to walk you through our financial results and share details on our Cost and Simplicity program, as well as our outlook for fiscal '24. Let me start with our fiscal '23 results. Net sales were $3.3 billion, in line with prior year. As a reminder, this year we benefited from an additional 53rd week. Non-GAAP gross profit for the year was $957 million compared to $992 million, and our non-GAAP gross margin was 28.9% compared to 29.7%. The decrease was due to inflation and lower volumes resulting in an unfavorable overhead absorption, partially offset by improved pricing and productivity efforts throughout the year. While commodity costs have continued to moderate, the benefit of the lower cost takes more time to be realized as we continue to work through older higher-cost inventory. Non-GAAP SG&A was $729 million compared to $732 million a year ago and was 22% as a percentage of net sales versus 21.9%. Non-GAAP one-time charges were approximately $17 million for the year, which are net of a gain of approximately $6 million on the sale of our distribution business into the independent garden center channel and related facility closures, the majority of which are part of our Cost and Simplicity program. Non-GAAP operating income for the year was $227 million compared to $260 million in the prior year. And non-GAAP operating margin was 6.9% compared to 7.8%. The decrease was due to inflation and lower volumes resulting in unfavorable overhead absorption which was only partially offset by improved pricing and productivity efforts. Other income and expense was income of $1.5 million compared to expense of $3.6 million in the prior year. Net interest expense was $50 million compared to $58 million a year ago, driven by higher cash balance, and interest income. Non-GAAP net income was $138 million compared to $152 million a year ago. And non-GAAP EPS came in at $2.59, in line with our revised guidance. GAAP EPS was $2.35. Adjusted EBITDA for the year decreased 7% to $343 million. Our tax rate for the year decreased by 80 basis points to 22.4% due to the impact of a lower blended state tax rate. Now, turning to the consolidated financials for the quarter. Fourth quarter net sales were $750 million, up 6%, primarily benefiting from the additional week this year. Non-GAAP gross profit for the quarter was $199 million, essentially in line with a year ago. And non-GAAP gross margin was 26.6% versus 28.2%, as the favorable impact of our pricing actions and productivity efforts was more than offset by inflation and unfavorable overhead absorption due to lower unit volumes. Non-GAAP SG&A expense for the quarter was $187 million, in line with prior year. And as a percentage of net sales, was 25% compared to 26.4% as we benefited from the additional week of sales while managing commercial spend, and administrative expense. Non-GAAP operating income for the quarter was $12 million compared to $13 million and non-GAAP operating margin was 1.6% compared to 1.8% in the prior year. Net interest expense was $8 million compared to $14 million a year ago. Non-GAAP income for the quarter was $5 million compared to a loss of $2 million in the prior year and non-GAAP earnings per share was $0.10 compared to a loss per share of $0.04 a year ago. GAAP EPS was $0.05. Weighted diluted shares outstanding decreased to 53.4 million from 54.4 million in the prior year. We bought back approximately 65,000 shares for roughly $2.4 million. Now, I'll provide some insights into the fourth quarter of our two segments, starting with Pet. Pet net sales for the fourth quarter increased 10% to $483 million, thanks to the extra week and strong consumer demand. Our POS growth was in the high single-digits, and coupled with improved service levels, resulted in share gains in a number of categories. Sales continue to grow in our pet consumables business across all categories including dog and cat, which had a record quarter. Pet distribution, animal health, small animal, bird, and aquatics, all experienced growth versus prior year. Pet durables continued to decline in high single-digits. Sales of our pet brands increased low double-digits, outperforming private label sales, which were negatively impacted by the purposeful exit of low-profit private label product lines and SKU rationalization. Driven by our efforts over the last couple of years to build capabilities around consumer insights, innovation, and category management, we gained or held market share in most of our categories, including dog toys and treats, small animal, bird, aquatics, and equine, reflecting the overall health of our brands. We gained mid-single-digits in total distribution points or TDPs. E-commerce continues to drive growth for the segment at the expense of brick-and-mortar. Thanks to our investments into online and digital, our e-commerce sales increased low double-digits, and now represent approximately 25% of total Pet sales. Moreover, we grew online market share broadly across many of our categories, including dog toys, equine, and animal health, small animal, and bird. Non-GAAP operating income for Pet was $48 million compared to $40 million, and non-GAAP operating margin was 9.9% versus 9.2% a year ago. The increase was driven by productivity efforts and improved pricing, partially offset by unfavorable overhead absorption. Pet adjusted EBITDA increased 15% to $58 million. Moving on to Garden. In the fourth quarter, Garden net sales were $267 million, in line with the prior year due to softness across most of the Garden portfolio except for Garden controls & fertilizer, live goods, and grass seed. We continue to grow market share in grass seed and wild bird, two important anchor categories in our Garden business We saw retailers continue to manage their inventory closely, shifting to just-in-time replenishment. This coupled with the declining foot traffic in home centers, and mass channel as well as extreme weather for the second year in a row, resulted in another challenging quarter for the Garden segment. Garden e-commerce sales continue to grow faster than brick-and-mortar as consumers shift more and more of their purchasing to online. Our e-commerce business, while still small, now represents approximately 6% of total Garden sales, thanks to our investments in digital and e-commerce capabilities. Non-GAAP operating loss for Garden was $5 million compared to operating profit of $2 million, and non-GAAP operating margin was negative 2% compared to 0.7% a year ago. The decrease was due to inflation, partially offset by improved pricing and productivity efforts. Garden adjusted EBITDA was $6 million compared to $12 million in the prior year. Now turning to the balance sheet and cash flows. Cash provided by operations was $382 million in fiscal '23 versus cash used by operations of $34 million in the prior year. I'm extremely proud of our team's focus on converting inventories into cash. Inventories at year-end were $100 million below prior year and inventory value is down for total Central and across both segments. CapEx for the year was $54 million, about half of what we invested in the prior year. In the quarter, we invested in automation and expansion of pet and wild bird, aquatics, live plants, and controls & fertilizer. Depreciation and amortization was $88 million compared to $81 million a year ago. Thanks to our focus on turning inventories into cash, we had a record cash flow year. Cash and equivalents including short-term investments were $489 million at year-end compared to $177 million in the prior year. Total debt was $1.2 billion, in line with prior year. We ended the quarter with a leverage ratio of 3.1 times compared to 2.9 times a year ago, well in line with our target range of 3 to 3.5 times. We had no borrowings under our $750 million credit facility at the end of the year. Given our financial strength, and in addition to our recent pet consumables acquisition, we continue to be on the lookout for high-growth companies with accretive margins in both Pet and Garden, to build scale in core categories, enter adjacent categories, and add key capabilities. Let me now touch on our Cost and Simplicity program. As previously communicated, we're in a multi-year journey to reduce cost and simplify how we operate. We have meaningful opportunity to better leverage the scale of our business across a number of areas, including procurement, manufacturing, logistics, portfolio optimization, and administrative costs. We expect to reduce complexity, which means fewer SKUs, increased manufacturing warehouse efficiency, as well as fewer facilities. We seek to lower costs through improved logistics costs, better procurement, and lower administrative costs. This will be done by leveraging our scale and capabilities across the Company. We believe this program will drive higher margins and generate more fuel to invest in organic growth and accretive M&A in both Pet and Garden. Now turning to the progress we've made so far in the different areas. First, in manufacturing. We continue to pursue a continuous improvement mindset by measuring cost and productivity by manufacturing line, by facility, which resulted in major improvements in cost per unit. In Q4, we announced the closure of an outdoor cushion manufacturing warehousing facility in Amarillo, Texas, moving all manufacturing to a centrally located consolidated facility. Second, logistics. We're aligning for scale in logistics by expanding our corporate transportation management system and centralizing load planning. In addition, we are standardizing how we operate our warehouses by reapplying internal best practices across BUs, deploying technology solutions to reduce waste, and implementing voice direct picking in multiple facilities. Moreover, we are closing three smaller Pet distribution facilities in Kansas and one in Illinois. Third, portfolio optimization. To become a more focused higher margin consumer products Company. As a result of the purposeful exit of low-margin private label pet bed product lines, we closed a smaller distribution facility in Corsicana, Texas in December of '22, followed by the closing of our pet bedding manufacturing and distribution facility in Athens, Texas in April of '23. We sold our independent garden center distribution business. As you recall, this channel represents less than 5% of our Garden net sales and was dilutive to our Garden operating income margin. As a result of the sale, we plan to close our Portland, Oregon Garden distribution facility. Fortifying the Central portfolio, two weeks ago, we acquired premium natural chews and treats company, TDBBS. Adding their established brands and digital capabilities solidifies our position in this large and growing category, strengthens our footprint with key customers, and enhances our e-commerce and digital capabilities. We remain committed on this multi-year journey to reduce cost and simplify our business. We have a pipeline of projects to leverage our scale and deploy our capabilities across the Company. We'll continue to provide regular progress updates on a quarterly basis. As always, our priority will be on business continuity and minimizing disruption to our operations. As a Company that has grown through acquisition, and that has the intention of continuing on that path, there is no shortage of opportunity ahead of us. Now turning to our fiscal '24 outlook. We currently expect non-GAAP EPS for the year to be $2.50 or better. Let me provide some color around our assumptions. We expect a challenging retail environment with customers continuing to manage their inventories closely, and consumers faced with high prices and interest rates reining in their spending. While our team has done a great job managing inventories, higher-value inventory is going to put pressure on margins for some part of the fiscal year. The benefit of the lower cost is taking more time to realize as we continue to work through existing high-cost inventory. Our Pet segment continues to perform well, especially in the consumables business such as dog treats and chews, small animal, and bird. Conversely, in line with the softer pet ownership, durables continue to present a challenge for the industry and Central. In addition, we remain cautious about the '24 Garden season after two years of unfavorable weather and continued declines in foot traffic at retail. As we look at CapEx, we're planning to invest approximately $70 million, most of which is required maintenance, and productivity initiatives across both our segments. While the near-term external environment remains challenging, we remain committed to our Central to Home Strategy as it relates to our consumer growth agenda and we continue to selectively invest in our digital marketing, brand building, and innovation, to drive profitable long-term organic growth, as well as investments to enable future Cost and Simplicity savings. Our guidance reflects our belief in the long-term health of our business, our team's execution, and the long-term trends that support the Pet and Garden industries. Fiscal '24 it's back to 52 weeks, whereas fiscal '23 benefited from an additional week. As always, our outlook excludes any impact from acquisitions, divestitures, or restructuring activities that may occur during fiscal '24, including any such project under the Cost and Simplicity program. It also excludes the impact of our recent pet consumables acquisition as we're still in the early stages of the integration process. We expect the acquisition to be accretive over time. However, it will have a minimal impact on fiscal '24. Now, as we look forward to the first quarter of fiscal '24, I want to remind you that Q1 is typically one of our smallest quarters and not indicative of the full year. We expect Q1 non-GAAP loss per share to be in the range of $0.15 to $0.20 for the quarter. To summarize, '23 was a challenging year for our industries and Central. Nevertheless, we delivered fiscal '23 non-GAAP EPS within our revised guidance, turned inventories into cash, generated record cash flow, and grew market share broadly across Pet and Garden. We continue to believe in the fundamental trends that support long-term growth in the Pet and Garden industries. Our Company remains strong, well-capitalized, and well-positioned to grow both organically, and through acquisitions in the coming years. And with that, I'd like to open the line for questions.