Thanks, Lance, and good afternoon, everyone. I will start by reviewing our two brands individually, followed by details on our consolidated performance and capital allocation. Starting with our Jack brand, second quarter same-store sales decreased 4.4%, comprised of a franchise restaurant comp decrease of 4.5%, and a company-owned sales decrease of 4%. This result included a decrease in transactions and negative mix, partially offset by many price increases which continue to moderate. As Lance mentioned, we continue to drive sales in our mobile and digital channels, which is essential in our efforts to increase active loyalty program membership and create personalized, targeted promotions to this high-value channel. We are also excited by our kiosk implementation at both brands, both the freestanding kiosks at Del and the flip kiosks now active in nearly 1,500 Jack locations as part of our new POS rollout. We feel great about our ability to achieve the target of 20% digital sales ahead of schedule. Turning to restaurant count, there were five restaurant openings and 12 restaurant closures in the quarter. Jack is still expecting to open between 35 to 40 restaurants for fiscal 2025, including openings in Chicago. Jack's restaurant level margin percentage in the quarter decreased to 19.6%, down from 23.6% a year ago, driven primarily by lower sales, continued inflation for commodities, wages, and utilities, as well as higher operating costs, partially offset by price increases and favorable beverage funding. More specifically, food and packaging costs as a percentage of sales declined 100 basis points from the prior year to 27.8%, driven by an increase in beverage funding related to a new contract entered into last quarter and many price increases, partially offset by commodity inflation of 3.4% in the quarter. Labor costs as a percentage of sales were 33.8%, increasing 320 basis points from the prior year. Wage inflation was 10.6% for the quarter, and mainly due to wage increases to comply with California's minimum wage law, which lapped its one-year mark on April 1st. Occupancy and other operating expenses increased 170 basis points, driven primarily by higher rent, utilities, and other operating expenses, including third-party delivery fees. Franchise level margin was $68.3 million, or 40% of franchise revenues, compared to $71.7 million, or 40.4% a year ago. The decrease in dollars was mainly driven by lower franchise same-store sales and the resulting decrease in royalty and rent revenue. Now turning to Del Taco. System same-store sales declined 3.6%, with a franchise sales decline of 4.2%, and a company-owned comp decrease of 1.7%. The lower sales were the result of a decline in transactions, partially offset by an increase in price. As mentioned last quarter, 100% of our company-owned restaurants have kiosks installed, and we are continuing to see franchisees increasing their adoption rate as well. Including kiosks, along with third-party delivery and mobile, digital mix now makes up over 18% of systemwide sales. We are also seeing positive momentum from the menu optimization initiative, which launched systemwide in the first half of Q1, driving improvements in both product mix and average check. Del Taco restaurant level margin was 12.8%, down 400 basis points from the prior year. The decline was driven mainly by lower sales and commodity and wage inflation, partially offset by menu price increases. Food and packaging costs as a percentage of sales decreased 100 basis points to 24.6% due to favorable beverage funding, partially offset by commodity inflation of 5.7%. Labor costs as a percentage of sales increased 330 basis points to 38.2% primarily due to wage inflation, which was 11.7% for the quarter, mainly due to increases to comply with California's minimum wage law. Occupancy and other operating costs increased 160 basis points, driven primarily by higher utility and maintenance and repair costs. Franchise level margin was 24.4% of franchise revenues compared to 28.9% last year. The decrease in franchise level margin percentage was driven by re-franchising and the associated impact of pass-through rent, marketing, and purchasing fees. Del Taco restaurant count at quarter end was 591 with six openings and four closures during the quarter. Moving on now to our consolidated results. SG&A for the quarter was $35.5 million or 10.5% of revenues as compared to $37.5 million or 10.3% a year ago. The decrease of $2 million was primarily due to lower share-based and incentive-based compensation, partially offset by fluctuations in the cash surrender value of our company-owned life insurance policies. Excluding net COLI gains and losses, as well as advertising costs, G&A was $26.2 million or 2.2% of total systemwide sales down $4.4 million versus the prior year. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA was $66.5 million down from $75.7 million in the prior year due primarily to the impacts from Del Taco re-franchising and sales deleverage and inflation experienced by both brands, partially offset by lower G&A. During the quarter, the company recorded noncash goodwill and intangible asset impairment of $203.2 million for the Del Taco reporting unit. This charge resulted from the lower current performance and other assumption updates impacting our long-term forecast and related cash flows. Due to the noncash goodwill and intangible asset impairment charge in the quarter, we reported a consolidated GAAP diluted loss per share for the second quarter of negative $7.47 compared to diluted earnings per share of $1.26 in the second quarter of the prior year. Operating earnings per share, which includes adjustments for certain items, was $1.20 for the quarter versus $1.46 in the second quarter of the prior year. The effective tax rate for the quarter was 19.5% compared to 26.5% for the same quarter a year ago. The lower tax rate was primarily due to non-deductible goodwill impairment and non-deductible COLI losses. The adjusted tax rate used to calculate the non-GAAP operating earnings per share this quarter was 24.8%. On the investing front, our capital expenditures were $21.5 million for the quarter and included investments in our restaurant technology and digital initiatives as well as development of new company restaurants. We did not repurchase any shares of stock during the quarter, and as previously announced, we discontinued our dividend. As of quarter end, we had available borrowing capacity of $96.5 million under our variable funding notes net of letters of credit issued. Our total debt outstanding at quarter end was $1.7 billion, and our net debt to adjusted EBITDA leverage ratio was 5.5x. Lastly, we'd like to reiterate that all guidance measures remain the same as provided on April 23rd as part of the Jack on Track plan announcement. Thanks again for your time this afternoon. Operator, please open the line for questions.