Okay. Thanks, John, and good morning, everyone. I've been with the company for a little over three months now and I'm really thrilled to be part of the team. Ned left some big shoes to fill, but obviously, he remains by my side. Moving on to the quarter. Revenues in the fourth quarter were $359.6 million, up $87.4 million or 32.1% year-over-year, with $71.7 million of the change driven by acquisition activity and $15.8 million of organic growth or 5.8%. Solid waste revenues were up 40.4% year-over-year with acquisition growth of 34.3%, price up 6.7% and volumes down 1.4%. Revenues in the collection line of business were up 54.8% year-over-year, with price up 7.2% and volumes down 2%. Volume declines were primarily a result of softness in temporary roll-off activity and customer churn, driven by our efforts to improve quality of revenue and margins in the residential line of business. Revenues in the disposal line of business were up 8% year-over-year, with landfill pricing up 6.9%, landfill tons down 3.7%, reflecting softness in C&D volumes in the market, while MSW and special waste volumes were essentially flat. Resource solutions revenues were up 8.8% year-over-year with price up 5.2% across the segment and acquisitions contributing 3.8%. Price growth was driven by an increase of 81%, or $45 per ton in our average commodity revenue over the historically low prices of Q4 2022, though this was muted by lower shipping fees that adjust to share higher commodity prices with our customers. Stepping back, recycled commodity prices have ridden a roller coaster over the past two years, with a multi-year peak in the first half of 2022 and trough in the second half, followed by a moderation of volatility and sequential recovery in prices over the course of 2023. Overall, commodity prices were a headwind on revenue for the year, but have now turned positive on a comparable year-over-year basis. But regardless of the direction of prices, the company's model works to preserve returns on its investment in recycling through the cycle, sharing the commodity price risk with our customers via contract structures and our SRA Fee. The past two years served as a really good case study. National accounts revenue within resource solutions was up 4.2% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA was $82.2 million in the quarter, up $25.9 million or 46.1% year-over-year with $16.3 million of the change from acquisitions and $9.7 million or 17% from organic growth. At $295 million for the year, adjusted EBITDA came in at the middle of our guidance range has increased at Q3. Solid waste adjusted EBITDA was $74.8 million in the quarter, up $23.5 million year-over-year with acquisition, strong pricing and operating efficiencies driving this growth. Resource solutions adjusted EBITDA was $7.4 million in the quarter, up $2.8 million year-over-year, driven by the benefits of the Boston MRF retrofit and higher commodity prices. Adjusted EBITDA margins were 22.8% for the quarter, which is a Casella record for the fourth quarter, up approximately 210 basis points year-over-year. Again, our pricing programs fully offset cost inflation in the quarter with consolidated price growth of 5.9%, providing 110 basis point spread over inflation which ran at 4.8%, excluding fuel. Inflation has been moderating, but flat sequentially in the quarter and, of course, remains elevated in historical terms. In addition to the 110 basis points from net price, further year-over-year margin bridging items include 140 basis points from improved collection operating performance, reflecting labor and cost efficiencies from our operating programs, improved recycling processing performance, again driven by the Boston MRF retrofit and lower fuel expense, net of fuel recovery fees. These were offset by a 35 basis point headwind from lower landfill volumes and higher leachate costs and a 5 basis point headwind from acquisitions as the acquired businesses have come in at a slightly lower margin pre-synergies than the existing business. This represents a margin tailwind opportunity, of course, as we execute on our integration and synergy plans. Cost of operations in the quarter was up $54.8 million year-over-year, but down 120 basis points as a percentage of revenue as the company continues to outpace inflation on the revenue line and operate more efficiently as I've mentioned. $50.1 million of the increase was from acquisitions. So on a same-store basis, cost of operations was down over 200 basis points as a percentage of revenue year-over-year, which is tremendous performance. General and administrative costs in the quarter were up $7.4 million year-over-year, but down 110 basis points as a percentage of revenue. $5.3 million of the increase was from acquisitions. The company is investing in the G&A line to support our growth, including adding a new region to manage our Mid-Atlantic operations. We expect to gain further leverage here over time as we grow. Depreciation and amortization costs were up $21.4 million year-over-year with $18.3 million of the increase resulting from the recent acquisition activity. As Ned explained last quarter, we expect heightened D&A for the first few years after each acquisition. To put this in perspective, D&A associated with acquisitions was 25.5% of acquired revenues in the quarter as compared to 12.6% for the base business. The P&L included a unique non-recurring item in the fourth quarter that I'd like to take a moment to explain. A $3.9 million charge for an event at our Ontario County Landfill where a layer of soil slid down the veneer of a capped section of the landfill. Nobody was hurt and normal operations were never interrupted. The charge covered the write-off of costs related to the capping work and current period costs for cleanup. Engineering analysis is currently underway to determine root causes and responsibility for the event. Our effective tax rate was 31.4% for the full year as certain non-deductible expenses and discrete items pushed the rate above our statutory rate of approximately 27%. Adjusted net income was $7.5 million in the quarter, down $2 million compared to prior year, with the accelerated D&A associated with acquisitions weighing on earnings. GAAP net loss was $1.8 million in the quarter, impacted by $5.2 million of expenses related to acquisitions and the $3.9 million landfill capping charge. Adjusted EPS was $0.13 in the quarter and $0.94 for the year. GAAP EPS was a loss of $0.03 in the quarter and earnings of $0.46 for the year. The company's acquisition growth strategy is weighing on the bottom line in the near term, with costs incurred to pursue, execute and integrate acquisitions and accelerated D&A impacting earnings. But it's building significant shareholder value for the long term and these acquisition-related P&L headwinds will become tailwinds in future years. Adjusted free cash flow was $128.3 million for the full year 2023, up 15% year-over-year and in the middle of our increased guidance range at Q3. Net cash provided by operating activities was $233.1 million for the full year. This was driven by the improved operating performance, partially offset by the cost of higher debt to finance acquisitions and higher outflows from net changes in assets and liabilities. In that line, DSO was flat year-over-year at 34 days, but we faced a few headwinds from a working capital standpoint, including higher landfill capping costs. Relative to our expectations at Q3, capital expenditures ended up coming in a little lighter as we planned for the heaviest capital spending quarter in the company's history. But delays in equipment deliveries pushed some spend into 2024, which is reflected in our guidance, which I'll discuss shortly. Going the other direction, cash costs for acquisition-related activities came in a bit higher. As of December 31, we had $1.05 billion of debt, $221 million of cash and available liquidity of $493 million. Our consolidated net leverage ratio for purposes of our bank covenants was 2.78 times. Our average cash interest rate was approximately 5% and we had fixed interest rates on over 75% of our debt, so the balance sheet is in great shape. Our liquidity and leverage profile will enable us to be opportunistic in continuing to execute on our robust M&A pipeline. As stated in our press release yesterday, we announced guidance for 2024 and those ranges and relevant underlying assumptions are laid out in our release. At the midpoints, the ranges reflect 18% growth in revenue year-over-year, 21% growth in adjusted EBITDA and 13% growth in free cash flow. Our guidance ranges assume a stable economic environment, but reflect a slightly cautious outlook on C&D volumes. On the top line, our guidance includes $175 million or approximately 14% of acquisition rollover with approximately 4.5% overall organic growth at the midpoint. While we expect to be acquisitive again in 2024, our guidance does not reflect any further acquisition activity. Organically, in the solid waste business, we expect pricing of 5% to 6%, again ahead of inflation, which for us is still running at approximately 4.5%. We retained pricing flexibility across approximately 70% of our collection revenue, so we're well positioned to respond to changing conditions if necessary as the year progresses. Solid waste volumes are expected to be flat to down 1%, with potential weakness in C&D volumes in the landfill and temporary roll-off businesses reflected in that estimate. Bridging 2023 adjusted EBITDA to our guidance, approximately $40 million is acquisition rollover, $5 million is improved performance at the Boston MRF, net of the impact of downtime to retrofit the Willimantic MRF as John discussed earlier, and $10 million to $20 million is base business organic growth. Our adjusted EBITDA guidance reflects 30 basis points to 50 basis points of margin improvement in 2024. Bridging margin from 2023, acquisitions are expected to weigh on margins by approximately 10 basis points. The Boston MRF, net of Willimantic downtime, is expected to add approximately 10 basis points to 20 basis points and organic growth adds 30 basis points to 40 basis points in our guidance, with pricing leverage and our operating programs offset somewhat by softer volumes. We expect free cash -- adjusted free cash flow to grow consistently with our long-term rate of 10% to 15%. We anticipate another year of investing significantly in the business with capital expenditures of approximately $180 million, which includes approximately $20 million for the Willimantic MRF retrofit, $20 million of other non-recurring spend in connection with recent acquisitions and approximately $5 million to complete the initial start-up investment at the McKean Landfill rail project. In closing, this is an exciting time in the company's history as our growth initiatives and operating programs are bearing real fruit and we're well-positioned to continue this momentum into 2024. Now I'll turn it over to Ned to add some further color on our strategic initiatives.