Thanks, Jason. In addition to Jason, we also welcomed our new CFO and CIO in January. Chris Miller joined as CFO and has over 40 years of finance and accounting experience, including 20 years of public company experience in wholesale and retail industries with a great track record of delivering on execution and profitability objectives. Lindsay Gray, who has been serving as our Interim CFO for the company since March of last year will continue in a role as Senior Vice President Accounting and Principal Accounting Officer, which she held prior to and during her appointment as Interim CFO. I'd like to thank Lindsay for stepping up and leading us during a pivotal year for the business and we are very fortunate to have her continued leadership over our accounting and reporting function moving forward. Next is Kumar Mishra. He joined as our CIO and has 25 years of experience in IT leadership, including extensive experience implementing and fixing SAP and will be instrumental as we continue our systems conversion journey. Most recently, he was the VP of Information Technology at Reynolds Consumer Products and also has worked at Nielsen and the OLAM Group. Now, moving on to our value proposition, comparable store sales increased 2.9% in the fourth quarter. driven by a 3% growth in comp count as customers responded to our healthy assortment of WOW! items featuring our deepest discounts. Our value metrics are all improving and we continue to take advantage of the tremendous availability of opportunistic products that are available in the marketplace. While we're beginning to see value move in the right direction, we can do more to best communicate our industry-leading value to our customers. Our marketing team is working on a more targeted approach with some exciting new messaging during the first quarter that centers on value and weekly deals. Meanwhile, our operations team is focusing on supporting our IOs with in-store merchandising on items with our deepest value. Next, we've made steady progress improving and enhancing base functionality across the business in our operator, our buying and our backend finance systems and tools. We have line of sight for enhancing other functionalities that are necessary for inventory planners and operators to optimize inventory management at both the store and the warehouse level. We have made progress towards launching our upgraded real-time order guide, which we expect to begin phasing in during the second quarter. As I mentioned on the last call, this is the critical merchandising and inventory management tool for our independent operators and we'll take the right amount of time that it takes to get this working the way it should. In addition, we continue to work on improving the speed and the visibility into key operational data and better reporting. This includes tools for operators to make decisions and manage the business more efficiently, and more automation to resolve back office inefficiencies. Our new CIO has his team focused on fully delivering all of the functionality that maximizes our efficiency. As I mentioned previously, we were trying to do too much too fast. We implemented a major new system, completed a significant acquisition that increased our store count materially, rapidly expanding into new markets and we began executing on a capacity-increasing supply chain initiative. We know we have a vast addressable market and tremendous long-term growth opportunities. To best take advantage, we need to simplify and take a more rigorous and disciplined approach to how we allocate incremental capital. With that in mind, we've been evaluating our recent new store openings, infrastructure, and growth initiatives. This work is ongoing, but I wanted to share a few key areas that we're addressing. First, we are reassessing our new store opening strategy. We know that when we open a new store in an existing market where we have brand recognition and distribution support in close proximity, these stores typically ramp faster than a store in a less developed new market. For new markets, clustering openings and adjacency to existing markets is important for brand recognition, for marketing, and for operational synergies, all of which contribute to help quickly a new store can ramp. As we looked at our opening schedule for the next two years, I saw that we were trying to open too many stores in too many new markets, which don't perform as well as existing markets or new adjacent markets. Thus, we are narrowing the focus in our future new store openings to target existing markets and - in a smaller set of high priority adjacent new markets and that will help us improve new store sales productivity and the return on invested capital. In addition, a more narrowed focus to new store openings will allow our infrastructure to more effectively support our expansion efforts. Lastly, we have experienced increasing pressure on build-out costs and while we're focused on ways to value engineer these costs down, it will take us some time to test and achieve a lower cost store build. Therefore, we believe that it is prudent to approach our new store growth goals at a more disciplined and measured pace, which will allow us to execute better and drive long-term sustainable growth with improving ROIC. When we last spoke, we had over 50 leases signed for 2025. As a result of our narrowed focus, we expect to open 33 to 35 net new stores in 2025 and exit leases with suboptimal locations, which Chris will discuss a little bit more in detail later. While we are tempering our near-term unit growth expectations, I want to reiterate that we believe our white space remains vast, with the potential to open over 4,000 stores across the United States. Next, in terms of supply chain, we've reassessed our infrastructure and taken a closer look at the most efficient and cost-effective way to scale our warehousing and distribution network. In order to support long-term expansion of our business, we need to continue investing in our supply chain. We spent a lot of time looking at the best use of capital to optimize our distribution network and to support our growth, and have decided not to pursue an expansion into multi-temperature distribution, which would have added complexity and required a much higher level of capital investment. We believe that we can simplify our regional supply chain strategy to drive operational efficiencies, improve inventory management and support our growth in a more capital-efficient way. For example, in February, we opened a new 680,000 square foot ambient distribution center in Vancouver, Washington to increase the warehouse capacity in the Pacific Northwest that will support our growing business in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. This DC will consolidate all or part of five warehouse facilities in the Greater Portland area into a new and more modern facility with room to grow and is optimally located to more efficiently service stores across the Northwest. We are phasing in capacity by category and location and expect to be fully scaling this warehouse by the end of 2025. Consolidating our Pacific Northwest distribution into one facility is expected to increase efficiencies and lower DC cost in the region over the long term. This facility will also offer better service and efficiencies for operators in that region. Finally, as an initial step to reassessing our G&A cost structure, we have implemented a reduction in the workforce. This reduction is a prudent step in building a more scalable cost structure. We're continuing to explore additional opportunities to further scale G&A through automation and process improvements over the longer term as we add new capabilities to the business. As we took a long hard look at these areas over the last three months, it was clear that these were necessary steps to building a stronger foundation from which to scale in the future. We're taking these steps to grow the business profitably and allocate capital in a manner which we expect will generate solid returns. We know that we have tremendous long-term growth potential and believe we're taking the right steps to drive sustainable growth, profitability, and ROIC going forward. In closing, it's been a busy and rewarding four months for me serving as interim CEO. As I step back into my role as Chairman, I wanted to share a few final perspectives on where we're going as a company. First, for me, it all starts with leadership, and Jason and Chris are the right people for the job. Their wealth of experience, coupled with their proven track records of driving operational execution will take this already differentiated business to the next level. Second, our focus on new store return economics, prudent capital deployment and building a scalable cost structure are the right steps to ensure that we drive sustainable growth going forward. There is still more work to be done, but we're on the right path. Third, being back in the day-to-day execution of this business is only reaffirmed by conviction in Grocery Outlet. Our recent financial performance reflects temporary impacts from systems conversions and executional challenges, but I remain as confident as ever in the long-term potential of this business to drive industry-leading long-term value for all of our stakeholders. Before handing things over to Chris, I'd like to thank the team and our independent operators for all of their hard work during this challenging period. Your commitment to our stores, your commitment to our communities and your commitment to our mission of touching lives for the better inspires me every single day. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Chris. Thank you.