T hank you, Lynn and thank you all for joining us this afternoon to review our fourth quarter results and discuss our outlook for 2024. Our solid fourth quarter results capped another record year for ICF. Key takeaways from 2023 include full year growth in revenues from continuing operations of 12%, further margin expansion driven by higher utilization, lower facility costs and the overall benefits of ICF’s increased scale, ICS considerable contract wins reaching over $2.3 billion for the year, of which 70% represented new business, indicating how well positioned we are in areas of increased spending, and lastly, the substantial runway ahead for ICF, as we ended the year with a $3.8 billion backlog, a book-to-bill ratio of 1.2 and a $9.7 billion business development pipeline, pointing to considerable growth opportunities for ICF over the next several years. Our investments in key growth markets continued to yield positive results and returns in 2023. These markets, namely utility consulting, disaster management, climate environmental and infrastructure services, together with public health and IT modernization, digital transformation accounted for approximately 80% of our revenues from continuing operations in 2023, up from 75% on the same basis last year and approximately 55% in 2020, a clear indication of the successful implementation of our strategic intent with which we have built out our capabilities over the past several years. ICF’s performance in these growth areas is primarily captured in our two major market categories: Energy Environment, Infrastructure and Disaster Management and Health and Social Programs. Revenues from continuing operations in our Energy Environment, Infrastructure and Disaster Management market, increased 10.3% in the fourth quarter and were up 13.4% for the full year, reflecting positive momentum across our portfolio of programs and services. Highlights included double-digit revenue growth in energy efficiency program revenue in 2023, thanks to continued expansion of existing programs and the capture of several new utility clients. As you can see from our earnings release, contract awards in this area were quite strong in the fourth quarter, with 45% of the dollar amount awarded to us representing new clients or expanded scopes of work. Our Energy Advisory work, which saw very strong growth in the fourth quarter and for the full year, benefiting from the addition of Power Engineering from CNY in May last year, which compromises the core of our grid engineering and analytics capability or GEA team, as well as increased demand for our power and technical advisory services around renewable development and the impacts of the IRA and the IIJA. Also, we are pleased to note that we were recently selected as Engineer of Choice for a large East Coast utility and we are seeing a significant number of revenue synergy opportunities with our GEA team and our Disaster Management, Environmental and Electrification teams. And our environmental and planning work for commercial clients also was a strong performer in the fourth quarter and full year, driven by ongoing work for renewable developers as well as increasing resilience work for utilities and undergrounding power lines. IRI tax credits are supporting private development of renewables. And despite a few cancellations, we are seeing strong demand for our services in these areas, mostly for projects offshore in New York, New Jersey and Northern California and future lease auctions in additional geographies are scheduled for this year. In Disaster Management, we continue to execute on our large multiyear contracts in Puerto Rico and Texas and are working on mitigation projects in over 15 states. We recently were awarded a small, but strategic project in Virginia and the County of Mali, where we are providing technical and training assistance for HUD compliance. Lastly, our Climate Environmental Infrastructure services, which cut across all of our client categories continued to show significant year-on-year growth in both the fourth quarter and full year. We saw expansion of climate programs for federal government agencies an increasing urgency at the federal level to disperse IRA and IIJA funding. ICF is currently working with a number of applicants on climate priority plans, which should provide additional opportunities for us as the years progresses. To-date, ICF has been awarded just north of $110 million, in contracts related to the IIJA and IRA, primarily from federal and state government clients and our current pipeline is over $215 million. This does not include all the related work that we are doing for commercial clients, where it’s more difficult to associate our engagements with specific legislation. Turning to our health and social programs market, revenues from continuing operations were up 2.4% in the fourth quarter and 15.9% for the full year. Fourth quarter comparisons were impacted by the anticipated roll-off of certain small business contracts held by companies we acquired as well as the significant reduction in pass-through revenues, associated with the large international development of the health contract. As you know, we had substantial federal government contract awards in the third quarter, followed by additional wins in the fourth quarter and our federal government pipeline was over $6.6 billion at the end of the year. Thus, we are confident that our federal government revenue comparisons will improve substantially in the second half of this year as new contracts ramp up. And we expect our federal government revenues to grow at a high single-digit rate for full year 2024. Notably in the fourth quarter was the receipt of the Excellence in Frontline Public Health award, given to the BioSense project, which we support at the Center for Disease Control. This project was recognized for its effort to collect data for more than 75% of the nation’s emergency rooms. Additionally, we expanded our conventional AI capabilities and our federal health work to introduce new strategies for data collection and processing that enhance the speed and accuracy of health information monitoring and response systems. Also, we won several awards for new or expanded work in the fourth quarter, including at the Environmental Protection Agency to assess the risk of chemical exposure to human health at the substance of use at Mental Health Services Administration to support mental health programs and at the Centers for Disease Control to support overdose prevention programs. In the IT modernization digital transformation arena, we followed strong third quarter contract awards of over $150 million, with another $150 million awards in the fourth quarter, including a $33 million recompete win, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to continue our modernization of their system for kidney dialysis data, a $58 million expanded recompete with the Western U.S. State Lottery to support the operation of its cloud-based website and new contracts from the FDIC in the Department of Treasury. Additionally, we continue to pursue new opportunities to drive synergies between SemanticBits, strong footprint at CMS and ICS platform capabilities with ServiceNow. And we are increasingly showcasing SemanticBits open source and cloud native capabilities to our longstanding clients at the CDC, the NIH and the FDA. Both public health and IT modernization are areas of bipartisan support and we believe ICF’s deep domain expertise in health and our broad technology capabilities across the key platforms of choice in the federal government position us for growth in 2024. Before ending my review of the 2023 business highlights, I want to mention a unique item. As you may know, we have an aviation consulting business that works with airlines, airports, and other aviation entities. We have particular expertise in the sustainable aviation fuels area. In fact, ICF proudly supported Virgin Atlantic Flight100, the first commercial aircraft flown on 100% sustainable aviation fuel from London, Heathrow landing at New York’s JFK on November 29, 2023. And we had several team members on board that flight. With that, I’ll now turn the call over to our CFO, Barry Broadus, for his financial review. Barry?