Thanks, John and good morning, everyone. I'll begin my comments covering the consolidated highlights of the second quarter on Slide 7. As always, the schedules in the appendix provide more detailed information on the financial results for the quarter, including certain non-GAAP measures discussed on today's call. As we've done in the past, we'll call out the impact of portfolio actions where applicable. For the second quarter, these impacts included last year's Ties divestiture and the Bridge Grid Deck product line exit, with a combined impact of 1.5% lower net sales this year. Net sales for the quarter were down 4.9% in total, 3.4% on an organic basis, driven primarily by weakness in the Rail segment. I'll unpack the drivers on the segment slides in a moment. Gross profit was down $1.7 million, with margins nearly flat with last year at 21.7%. Lower margins in Rail were largely offset by improved margins in Infrastructure. The improved margins within Infrastructure were due primarily to the favorable impact of our portfolio actions coupled with an $800,000 gain on the sale of an ancillary property in the quarter. Selling, general and administrative costs increased $0.4 million over the prior year due primarily to corporate legal provisions as well as professional service costs incurred as associated with the announced restructuring. Net income for the quarter totaled $2.8 million, unfavorable 19.4% versus the prior year quarter. The net gain realized on the property sale as well as certain corporate legal costs were excluded from adjusted EBITDA. Each of them were approximately $800,000 in the quarter. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $8.1 million, down 23.8% versus last year due primarily to lower gross profit coupled with higher professional service costs associated with the restructuring. In line with our seasonal working capital needs, cash used for operating activities in the quarter was $5 million. These needs were somewhat lower this year due to the commercial weakness in the quarter. I'll provide some additional color on orders and backlog by segment later in the presentation. The bridges on Slide 8 reflect the organic and portfolio-driven impacts on sales and adjusted EBITDA for the quarter versus last year. The sales bridge on the left breaks out the impact of the business divestitures and isolates the organic sales decline of $5 million, which was primarily realized within the Rail segment. The EBITDA bridge highlights the profitability uplift year-over-year delivered from our portfolio work. This is despite the $2.2 million sales decline from these activities. The legacy business profitability is down due primarily to the Rail segment volumes and margins, coupled with corporate professional fees associated with the restructuring. Turning to sales and margin trends on Slide Number 9, the sales trend on the left reflects the strong organic performance we've delivered in recent quarters. Despite the softer second quarter, the trailing 12-month organic growth rate was still 8.7%. Despite the lower second quarter sales, margins have remained resilient at a level above 21% for five straight quarters. This achievement highlights the transformation of our business portfolio as well as improved pricing and manufacturing execution across the majority of the business. We're confident in the long-term demand prospects for our end markets and believe we will see improvements once the macro uncertainty drivers begin to clear. In the meantime, we're focused on delivering strong profitability growth and margin expansion despite the short-term commercial headwinds. Over the next couple of slides, I'll cover our segment and performance in the quarter, starting with the Rail segment on Slide 10. Second quarter Rail revenues totaling $85.6 million were down 6.6% from last year, including a 1.5% decline from the Ties divestiture. The 5% organic decline was driven primarily by lower volumes and softer market prices in the rail products business unit. Rail margins of 20.9% were down 80 basis points year-over-year, driven by lower overall sales and margins within rail products. And on a positive note, margins in the Global Friction Management and Technology Services and Solutions improved versus last year, including some recovery in our UK business. Second quarter Rail orders increased $1 million year-over-year and up $4.4 million, excluding the impact of last year's Ties divestiture. Backlog of $114.8 million decreased $17.7 million from the prior year quarter, with the decline primarily within rail products and lower business activity in the UK. Second quarter Rail orders and backlog increased sequentially 39.7% and 33.4%, respectively. Turning to Infrastructure Solutions on Slide 11, segment revenue decreased $1.2 million or 2.2%. However, 1.4% of the decline was due to divestiture and product line exit activity. Organic sales were relatively flat compared to the prior year. Gross profit margins were up 90 basis points to 22.9%. The improvement was realized within steel products driven by portfolio changes executed over the last year as well as the $800,000 gain on the sale of an ancillary property. Infrastructure orders were $54 million, down $13.8 million from the prior year quarter due to softer demand across the steel products business unit, primarily in protective coatings. Precast orders were flat year-over-year. Backlog totaling $135 million was down $22.6 million, $6.9 million due to the bridge product line exit. The balance of the decline was realized across the steel products business unit. Precast concrete backlog improved $2 million versus last year. I'll next cover our year-to-date results on Slide Number 12. Organic sales increased 5.5%, partially offset by a 4.9% decline from divestiture and exit activities. Organic sales growth was driven by the Rail segment as a result of the strong segment performance in the first quarter. Gross profit improved $1.2 million, including the $800,000 property sale gain in Q2, while gross profit margins of 21.4% improved 30 basis points. The improvement can be attributed to the business portfolio changes in line with the company's strategic transformation, coupled with overall higher sales volumes and favorable business mix realized in the Rail segment in the first quarter. Selling, general, and administrative costs increased $1.7 million over the prior year due primarily to corporate legal provisions as well as professional service costs associated with the announced restructuring. Net income for the quarter totaled $7.3 million, favorable $5.9 million over the prior year, including $4.3 million in gains from ancillary property sales in 2024. The prior year included $3.1 million in losses on the divestiture of Chemtec and Ties. The net gain realized on asset sales and certain corporate legal costs were excluded from the 2024 year-to-date adjusted EBITDA, which was $14 million, down $1.1 million due primarily to higher selling and administrative costs. Cash used by operating activities in the first half of 2024 was $26.8 million, driven by seasonal working capital needs and annual incentive and business insurance funding. I'll now cover our liquidity and leverage metrics reflected on Slide 13. Second quarter net debt declined $2.5 million versus the prior year, while the gross leverage ratio increased 2/10 of a turn to 2.7 times. This level of net debt was largely in line with our expectations, and we expect net debt will decline through the balance of the year. We also expect the gross leverage ratio to improve by year-end. Our normal working capital cycle typically results in strong cash generation in the second half of the year. We expect free cash flow to range between $25 million to $30 million in the second half of 2024, with a gross leverage ratio closer to our longer-term target of 2 times by year-end. While our updated free cash flow guidance reflects a more cautious outlook for cash generation in 2024, we remain confident in our ability to manage our leverage metrics at around 2 times over the long-term given our capital-light business model. We plan to continue to prudently deploy operating cash along our capital allocation priorities, including continuing the execution of our stock repurchase program. Since the program's inception in February of 2023, we've repurchased about 204,000 shares of stock, representing approximately 1.9% of the common stock outstanding at an average price of approximately $19.50 per share. On August 5, 2024, our Board of Directors approved a modification to the program, which shortens its tenure from three to two years and allows the remaining $11 million authorization to be used through February of 2025 without restriction. As a reminder, we're now down to $4 million owed to Union Pacific, with $2 million paid on August 1st and the remaining $4 million due in December. And the U.S. Federal NOLs should continue to minimize our cash tax burden for the foreseeable future. In summary, despite the softer outlook for cash generation for the full year, we believe the key drivers of strong, sustainable free cash flow are in place and should continue to improve through the balance of 2024 and moving into 2025. I'll next revisit our capital allocation priorities outlined on Slide 14. We continue to focus on managing leverage levels while opportunistically investing in organic growth opportunities we see in Rail Technologies and Precast Concrete. Our announced restructuring program should further enable investment in growth platforms given the expected cost savings over the coming quarters. We're comfortable with gross leverage around 2 times and believe we will be back near that level by year end. Capital spending is expected to run at approximately 2.5% of sales on average, which is slightly higher than our historical levels due to investments in our growth platforms. As mentioned before, we continue to evaluate opportunities to return cash to shareholders through our stock repurchase program, and we plan to use this important capital allocation lever prudently given the approved changes to the program. We continue to consider small tuck-in acquisitions that can extend our product portfolio within our growth platforms, and this is expected to become an increasingly important driver of our growth as we establish goals beyond 2025. And finally, we continue to consider a dividend as a capital allocation option as the prospects for stronger free cash flow improve, particularly in 2025 and beyond. My closing comments will refer to Slides 15 and 16 covering orders, revenues, and backlog by business. The book-to-bill ratio over the trailing 12 months was 0.93:1, which reflects the lower order rates in both segments, coupled with strong order book execution and improved lead times. Q2 order rates improved in Rail year-over-year, while weaker demand across the steel products business drove the Infrastructure decline. Consolidated second quarter order rates did improve sequentially 29.2%. And lastly, the consolidated backlog, on Slide 16, was down $40 million from the record high levels last year, with both segments experiencing declines. The Rail segment backlog is down $17.7 million or 13.3%. As mentioned in the past, order rates and backlog are susceptible to large swings driven primarily by project order timing in the rail distribution business. In addition, backlog in our UK business is down $9.2 million as we purposely scaled back our investment in this market until a clearer recovery path develops. On a positive note, the Rail backlog is up approximately 30% versus the previous three quarter average, indicating some favorable development. Infrastructure backlog is down $22.6 million or 14.3%, with the entire decline due to steel products. Precast concrete backlog improved $2 million or 2.2%. The $24.6 million decline in steel products' backlog was due to lower demand levels across the business unit as well as a $6.9 million decline from product line exit activities. Despite the lower backlog level, we remain optimistic in the longer-term prospects for growth and demand across our portfolio and expect this will translate into an improving backlog in the future once near-term macroeconomic conditions improve. In summary, we continue to remain optimistic about our 2024 outlook despite some temporary headwinds experienced in the second quarter. Our revised financial guidance implies an expected adjusted EBITDA growth rate of approximately 12% for 2024, with strong profitability expansion and cash generation in the second half. We remain focused on finishing the year on a positive note, and look forward to reporting on our progress next quarter. Thanks for the time, and I'll now hand it back to John for his closing remarks. John?