Thank you, Julie, and good afternoon, everyone. We appreciate you joining us today. Our fiscal first quarter results reflect challenging conditions in both segments, but we have taken action and expect that our results will improve as we progress through the fiscal year. In the Grown segment, high volumes of Mexican avocados, especially small fruit, combined with still high retail shelf prices, pressured wholesale prices and margins more than anticipated during the quarter. While we expected industry avocado volume to increase during the quarter, we did not anticipate prices and margins to contract as much as they did. The average case price in our first quarter fell to about $28 versus around $34 in the fourth quarter and $43 in the prior year quarter. We also expected prices and margins to improve approaching the Super Bowl. Although conditions did improve later in January, the impact was more muted than anticipated. Prepared segment performance was better than the prior year but was weaker than expected due to a combination of volume softness and winter weather. We expected a decline in Prepared segment earnings versus the fourth quarter due to seasonality in our fresh-cut division, but we experienced softness in volume that exceeded typical seasonality, with total Prepared segment volume down about 13%. Velocity slowed in the quarter, which was partly attributed to a decline in volume sales across retail food categories as consumers reacted to inflation and tough general economic conditions. Separately, we incurred weather events during the quarter that cost about $1 million of unfavorable incremental cost in the fresh cut division, mainly from the temporary closure of some of our manufacturing facilities. Understanding our first quarter results in the context of the market around us is important. Avocado import volume from Mexico grew over 8% versus the same quarter in 2022, but retail sales volume only grew about 3%, while total U.S. inventories rose almost 7%. We attribute the relatively lower retail volumes in part to retail prices, which haven't declined to the same extent as wholesale prices. Higher inventories also pressured wholesale prices of avocados and compressed margins as the industry worked through aging inventory. During the quarter, our Prepared segment faced the pressures from a declining category. In retail, dollar volume sales are up across almost all prepared categories in which we participate. However, according to IRI, unit volumes declined in produce categories as a whole in almost every category in which we participate by anywhere from 2% to 5% in the second half of '22. Consumers either traded down or passed on certain convenience stick categories in the store perimeter. As unit volume declines on a store-by-store basis, our margins suffer and Prepared as we lose benefits from fixed cost absorption. We believe the worst is behind us for the fiscal year, and we expect to see sequential improvement in our results as we progress throughout the year. But margin volatility in Grown and volume softness in Prepared may persist in the near term. We did see conditions in the Grown segment improved in February. And we've realized volume increases versus the prior year in the 7% to 9% range and avocado margins within our targeted range of $3 to $4 per case for most of the second quarter. However, the start of the avocado seasons in California and Peru may lead to ongoing volatility in Grown margins. In our Prepared segment, the one perimeter of the store category that saw unit volume growth in the second half of '22 was deli grab-and-go items. As mentioned during our last call, our new customer acquisition strategy has been focused on deli grab-and-go items, and we are on schedule to onboard new Prepared deli and grab-and-go volume with 2 national customers in the second half of the year. We expect volume weakness to persist until then. The operating environment coupled with our first quarter results, has caused us to lower our fiscal year margin expectations for both segments. For 2023, we estimate adjusted EBITDA in the range of $40 million to $45 million. While we are not setting the precedent of giving annual EBITDA guidance, we believe it is important to provide an indication of our expectations for this year given the first quarter results. Investing to grow the business, resulting in long-term shareholder value is undeniably our top capital allocation priority. We are also committed to paying a dividend with competitive yield and payout metrics relative to benchmarks. However, the metrics associated with our current dividend rate have been elevated since fiscal 2020 and remain elevated under the current operating environment. We plan to reset the dividend to a level that provides more market-aligned metrics. We anticipate the Board of Directors will declare a dividend of $0.10 per share for the second quarter. Although we remain committed to growing the business, we also plan to reduce our fiscal 2023 capital expenditures while we navigate near-term uncertainties. We now expect capital expenditures for fiscal 2023 of approximately $13 million. These adjustments reflect deliberate fiscal discipline that allow us to continue prioritizing investment for growth while maintaining competitive dividend metrics. Although the start to the fiscal year has been disappointing, we remain focused on making steady lasting improvement to the business. During the second quarter, we initiated activity on several fronts that will offer immediate benefits to earnings. As an example, we recently went live with the first phase of a new transportation management system that enables RFPs on most of our outsourced freight, which will significantly improve the competitiveness of our freight costs. This system will be fully implemented during the second quarter. In early March, we implemented a restructuring of our U.S. and Mexico operations that will allow us to upgrade essential organizational capabilities and to streamline and reduce costs related to certain functions. We recently consolidated activities within our Grow distribution network to streamline operations and reduce costs. And we recently entered into an agreement to exit our noncore salsa business as we intend to direct more resources towards guacamole growth. Pricing is always a focus for us. As you probably know, we priced our Grown product on a daily basis. However, our Prepared business has been comprised of almost exclusively annual or multiyear fixed-price contracts. Over the course of the last 6 months, we have converted more than 50% of our expected annual Prepared revenue stream to contractually committed pricing windows that range between 2 and 4x a year, allowing us to react quickly to changes we see in market dynamics, inflation and industry costs. These actions do not represent an exhaustive list of improvement activities that are underway, but I wanted to highlight some of the most influential and relevant items that will have immediate impact. I'd like to wrap up my prepared comments by saying that despite market and category performance that was less than our expectations, our commitment hasn't wavered. We are still focused on performance improvement, on growth and on generating shareholder value. It's our job to manage through a challenging market condition, and we must be and are nimble in our response to changing market dynamics. The path to growth is in a straight line and there are obstacles, but we will keep driving forward. And now I'll turn the call over to Shawn to report on the financials.