Thank you, John, and welcome to everyone on the call today. Jumping into the results. Our third quarter revenues were $229 million. Core revenue, which excludes the impact of foreign currency, acquisitions and discontinued product lines grew over 6% for the quarter, while foreign currency was a headwind of 140 basis points compared to the prior year. As John mentioned, this growth was impacted by our shipping inefficiencies as we did not reduce our past due backlog as we had planned and our extended lead times negatively impacted demand. Moving to the segment level. Revenues in our Food Safety segment were $158 million in the quarter, an increase of 4% compared to the prior year, including core growth of almost 6%. The core growth was led by the indicator testing, culture media and other product categories, which benefited from double-digit growth in our Petrifilm and sample handling product lines, primarily driven by North America and Europe. Within the natural toxins and allergens category, solid growth in allergens from tree nut test kits and improved product availability in North America was offset by a decline in natural toxins due mainly to reduced product availability. The bacterial and general sanitation product category saw growth in microbiology and general sanitation partially offset by a decline in pathogens, due primarily to the shipment delays to Latin America and Asia. Quarterly revenues in the Animal Safety segment were $71 million, which includes a core revenue increase of 7% compared to the prior year quarter. We saw the destocking trend normalize with non-genomic sales that go primarily through distribution, up 15% on a core basis, a significant improvement from the second quarter. We saw core growth in all major product categories, led by our biosecurity portfolio, a result of new business wins and increased demand related to the ongoing ABM flu outbreak. Our vet instruments and disposables products also experienced strong growth due mainly to higher sales of detectable needles and syringes. Finally, in the Animal Care and other category, similarly strong growth was led primarily by higher sales of vitamin injectables and biologics. Worldwide genomics revenue was down mid-single digits on a core basis, which marked a slight improvement from the second quarter. The decline continued to be driven by small production animals, reflecting the strategic shift away from this end of the market. The effects of this strategic shift in focus offset growth in Europe and in dairy genomics in China. From a geographical perspective, core revenue growth was mixed. Growth was led by North America, which grew high-single digits from strong growth across most key product categories, including Petrifilm, pathogens, sample handling, hygiene monitoring, biosecurity and vet instruments. Our business in Europe grew mid-single digits on a core basis with strength in Petrifilm, pathogens and sample handling as well as genomics. Asia-Pacific core revenue was roughly flat on a year-over-year basis with strong growth in allergens, biosecurity products and genomics, offset by declines in pathogens and sample handling. Notably, we saw a return to growth in China and Japan, including Petrifilm, which had been challenged by some lost customers due to product availability issues. In Latin America, core growth was also roughly flat after strong growth in the second quarter. Higher sales of allergen test kits, biosecurity products, vet instruments and genomic services were offset by lower sales of culture media, pathogens and sample handling products due in part to shipping constraints impacting our export levels. Gross margin in the third quarter was 51.1% representing an increase of 160 basis points from 49.5% in the same quarter a year ago, with the margin expansion driven primarily by the recovery in sales of the former 3M products, particularly Petrifilm, compared to the prior year Q3. Adjusted EBITDA was $53 million in the quarter with an adjusted EBITDA margin of 23%, representing a year-over-year decline of 50 basis points. The margin decline resulted from growth in operating expenses more than offsetting the gross margin improvement. During the last 12 months, we have added costs to extract ourselves from the transition service agreements and also experience certain inefficiencies, mostly in logistics as we work through the integration of distribution activities. Finally, we have added additional investment that contemplated the business being at a higher operating level, and we are planning to address those costs and others during Q4. Adjusted net income and adjusted earnings per share were essentially flat to the prior year quarter at $26 million and $0.12, respectively. The higher adjusted EBITDA in the current year Q3 fell through to adjusted net income at a lower rate, primarily due to higher depreciation expense related to our ERP implementation. We ended the quarter with gross debt of $900 million, 67% of which remains at a fixed rate and a total cash position of $168 million. Cash was impacted by planned integration CapEx and further purchases of finished goods inventory as we exited the 3M distribution network. Cash was further impacted by an elevated accounts receivable balance, driven mostly by the back-end loaded nature of the quarter as well as the semiannual interest payment on our bonds. As John mentioned earlier, we are encouraged by the positive direction in which our end markets are trending. However, the impact from our shipping efficiencies impacted Q3 and will continue in Q4 at a rate higher than previously anticipated. As a result, we are updating our full year guidance and now expect revenue to be between $910 million and $920 million and adjusted EBITDA to be in the range of $210 million to $215 million. We continue to expect full year capital expenditures of approximately $130 million, including integration related capital expenditures of approximately $100 million, the majority of which we do not expect to repeat next year. I'll now hand the call back to John for some closing thoughts.