Thank you Patrick. Today I will provide some highlights from our fourth quarter and fiscal year end 2024 financial performance, followed by our fiscal year 2025 guidance. Starting off with fiscal 2024 highlights, I am pleased with our overall performance and our strong finish to the year. The businesses total revenue improved each quarter during the past fiscal year and as Patrick and I have reiterated, we believe we are on the path to normalized margins over the intermediate-term. Starting with census, we served approximately 7,020 participants across 20 centers as of June 30, 2024. This represents an increase of 9.6% from 2023 and a 2.8% increase compared to the third quarter of 2024. We reported 80,840 member months in fiscal 2024, a 4.5% increase compared to the prior year. Total revenue increased by 11% to $763.9 million for fiscal year 2024. The increase was primarily driven by an increase in member months, primarily due to the release of sanctions in our Sacramento, California center and at our Colorado centers, and an increase in both Medicaid and Medicare capitation rates. Compared to the third quarter, total revenue increased by 3.3% to $199.4 million in the fourth quarter, primarily due to an increase in member months coupled with retroactive Medicare risk adjustment payments recognized in the fourth quarter. We incurred $403 million of external provider costs during the fiscal year, a 7.6% increase compared to fiscal year 2023. The increase was primarily driven by an increase in member months, coupled with an increase in cost per participant. The cost per participant increase was primarily driven by higher assisted living utilization and unit costs, as well as an increase in costs associated with higher utilization of professional services. These costs were partially offset by a reduction in permanent nursing facility utilization. For the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024, we incurred $102.7 million of external provider costs, a 2.7% increase compared to the third quarter. The sequential increase was primarily driven by an increase in member months coupled with an increase in inpatient and assisted living facility unit costs. Cost of care, excluding depreciation and amortization was $228.8 million for fiscal year 2024, a 7.8% increase compared to fiscal 2023. The increase was primarily due to an increase in cost per participant coupled with an increase in member months. The increase in cost per participant was driven by an increase in salaries, wages, and benefits associated with increased headcount to support growth and higher wage rates and increase in contract provider expense in California to support growth, increased fleet expense and contract transportation, as a result of higher average daily attendance, an increase in external appointments and higher fuel costs, increased building maintenance and security, an increase in software license fees, and an increase in de novo occupancy and administrative costs, inclusive of the Concerto acquisition in December 2023. This was partially offset by a reduction in costs associated with third-party audit and compliance support. In the fourth quarter, cost of care increased 1.8% to $60.1 million compared to the third quarter. The increase was primarily due to an increase in headcount and contract providers in California. Center-level contribution margin, which we define as total revenue less external provider costs and cost-of-care, excluding depreciation and amortization, which includes all medical and pharmacy costs, was $132.1 million for fiscal year 2024, a 30.4% increase compared to fiscal year 2023. As a percentage of revenue, our center-level contribution margin ratio increased approximately 260 basis points to 17.3% compared to 14.7% in the prior year. For the fourth quarter, center-level contribution margin was $36.6 million compared to $34 million in the third quarter. As a percentage of revenue, center-level contribution margin increased approximately 70 basis points to 18.3% compared to 17.6% in the third quarter. Sales and marketing expense was $25 million for fiscal year 2024, an increase of $5.3 million compared to fiscal year 2023. The increase was primarily driven by increased marketing spend and an increase in salary, wages, and benefits associated with increased headcount, both of which were associated with the release of sanctions at our Colorado and Sacramento, California centers and the opening of our new Tampa and Orlando centers in Florida. In the fourth quarter, sales and marketing expense was $6.5 million, a decrease of approximately $600,000 compared to the prior quarter. The decrease was primarily due to lower marketing spend in the quarter, as we continue to refine our digital strategy and focus on lead quality. This follows the increased marketing spend in the third quarter for our newly opened Tampa Center and recently acquired Crenshaw Center. Corporate, general and administrative expense decreased to $111.3 million, a $4.3 million decrease compared to fiscal year 2023. The decrease was primarily due to reductions in third-party legal expense, insurance expense, consulting costs associated with improving organizational capabilities including our transition to EPIC, a reduction in contract staffing and lower recruiting expense. The decrease was partially offset by costs associated with an increase in headcount, bad debt expense and consulting costs, including SOX compliance, internal audit support and public relations. Corporate, general and administrative expense increased to $29.6 million in the fourth quarter, a $2 million increase compared to the third quarter. The increase was primarily due to an increase in third-party legal expense, partially offset by a reduction in D&O insurance expense. We reported a net loss of $23.2 million in fiscal 2024, compared to a net loss of $43.6 million in fiscal 2023. On a per-share basis, we reported a net loss of $0.16 compared to $0.30 in fiscal 2023. For the fourth quarter, we reported a net loss of $2.3 million compared to a net loss of $6.2 million in the third quarter. We reported a net loss per share of $0.01 on both a basic and diluted basis, and our weighted average share count was approximately 136 million shares for the quarter on both a basic and fully diluted basis. Effective for fiscal 2024, we revised our calculation of adjusted EBITDA to reflect the impact of other investment income and to no longer exclude de novo center development costs. We believe this revised presentation more closely reflects our operating core performance as we return to growth. All numbers for prior periods have been recast to conform to this revised presentation. Fiscal year 2024 adjusted EBITDA was $16.5 million compared to an adjusted EBITDA loss of $3.4 million in fiscal 2023, an approximately $20 million improvement. Our adjusted EBITDA margin was 2.2% for fiscal 2024 compared to an adjusted EBITDA margin loss of 0.5% in the prior fiscal year. We reported adjusted EBITDA of $5.2 million for the fourth quarter compared to $3 million in the third quarter, and our adjusted EBITDA margin was 2.6% for the fourth quarter compared to 1.5% in the third quarter. Under the previous presentation, our fiscal 2024 EBITDA would have been $19.8 million which compares favorably to our full year guidance of $12 million to $18 million. De novo losses, which are not included in our adjusted EBITDA calculation and which we define as net losses related to pre-opening and startup ramp through the first 24 months of de novo operations were $12 million for fiscal 2024, and primarily related to our centers in Florida and the recently acquired Bakersfield and Crenshaw centers. This compares to $4 million of de novo losses in fiscal 2023. For the fourth quarter, de novo losses were $4.2 million compared to $4.1 million in the third quarter. Turning to our balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $56.9 million in cash and cash equivalents, plus $45.8 million in short-term investments. We had $83.3 million in total debt on the balance sheet, representing debt under our senior secured term loan plus financed lease obligations and other commitments. For the fourth quarter, we recorded cash flow from operations of $1.9 million, had $3.3 million of capital expenditures, and repurchased approximately 45,000 shares of our common stock for an aggregate of approximately $225,000 under the company's $5 million share repurchase plan. Regarding our fiscal 2025 guidance, which we included in today's press release, based on the information, as of today, we expect our ending census for fiscal 2025 to be between 7,300 and 7,750, and member months to be in the range of 86,000 to 89,000. We are projecting total revenue in the range of $815 million to $865 million and adjusted EBITDA in the range of $24 million to $31 million. Finally, we anticipate that de novo losses for fiscal 2025 will be in the $18 million to $20 million range. I will also provide some additional color on a few of the components that comprise our guidance assumptions. Starting with revenue. As a reminder, our Medicaid rates are based on county-specific rates that are adjusted by CMS in January, coupled with prospective risk score adjustments in January and July. For Medicaid, our rates are contractually determined based on cost for PACE or comparable populations in each state. Additionally, in fiscal year 2025, we are updating our reporting methodology by recording bad debt as a contra revenue item rather than as an expense. Our fiscal year 2025 guidance takes this updated reporting methodology into account, and we are expecting a combined mid-single-digit rate increase comprised of the following. A low single-digit Medicare Part C increase, a mid-single-digit Medicare Part D increase, and for Medicaid, a mid-single-digit rate increase inclusive of an 8.8% increase in Colorado, which includes funding for assisted-living and nursing facility unit cost increases effective July 1. 2.5% in Virginia an estimated low single-digit rate increase in California effective January 1, 2025, and an estimated mid-single-digit rate increase in Pennsylvania effective January 1. We do not anticipate a rate increase in New Mexico at this time. Finally, some thoughts on cost of care, external provider costs, and overall Center-level margins. We've made demonstrable progress in the business over the course of fiscal 2024. As we highlighted during our Investor Day back in February, we believe that in the intermediate term, we can achieve adjusted EBITDA margins in the high-single digits. We continue to focus our efforts on maintaining high quality and compliance standards while working diligently to offset annual cost trends with ongoing clinical value initiatives and our new operational value initiatives that Patrick touched on in his remarks. Our Fiscal 2025 guidance factors in the strong foundation we've laid for ourselves in fiscal 2024, the initiatives we are implementing to offset annual cost trends, and the temporary census headwinds that Patrick highlighted, driven by state processing delays, which we believe create a compelling and achievable margin growth story towards our target of high single-digit adjusted EBITDA margins over the intermediate-term. We continue to make significant investments in the business, including updating our financial systems to Oracle, while maintaining a disciplined approach to costs and being ever mindful of providing high-quality service and compliance in each of our centers. In closing, we believe we are continuing to make improvements to the business every quarter. We remain focused on day-to-day operational execution and continuing the earnings momentum we laid the groundwork for in fiscal 2024. Operator, that concludes our prepared remarks. Please open the call for questions.