Thank you, John, and welcome to everyone on the call today. Jumping into the results. Our fourth quarter revenues were $237 million. Core revenue, which excludes the impact of foreign currency, acquisitions and discontinued product lines grew 2% for the quarter, while foreign currency was a headwind of 420 basis points compared to the prior year. Although we made significant progress during the quarter, our total revenue was impacted by our lower order fulfillment rates. Moving to the segment level. Revenues in our Food Safety segment were $167 million in the quarter, a decrease of 1% compared to the prior year, including core growth of over 4%. The core growth was led by the indicator testing, culture media and other product category, which benefited from double-digit growth in our Petrifilm product line as well as solid growth in culture media and food quality nutritional analysis. The bacterial and general sanitation product categories saw growth in pathogens and general sanitation partially offset by a slight decline in microbiology due primarily to a higher level of equipment sales in prior year period. Within the natural toxins and allergens category, modest growth in allergens was offset by a decline in natural toxins due mainly to reduced product availability. Quarterly revenues in the Animal Safety segment were $70 million, which includes a core revenue decline of 3% compared to the prior year quarter. Overall, inventory levels in the channel remained largely stable with our decline in core revenue being driven by a couple of specific product category dynamics. The Vet Instruments and Disposables product line had another quarter of solid core growth. In the Animal care and other product category, core growth was led by higher sales of our vitamin injectables and Biologics products. Within our portfolio of biosecurity products, strong growth in insect control was offset by declines in cleaners and disinfectants and rodent control due primarily to a compare challenge on strong growth in the prior year quarter and timing of current year shipments. Worldwide genomics revenue was down mid-single digits on a core basis. Solid growth in beef markets in EMEA and Latin America was offset by the shift away from small production animals in the U.S., the impact of which we expect to decrease as we exit the first quarter. From a regional perspective, core revenue growth in the fourth quarter was mixed. Growth was led by Latin America, which saw growth well into the double digits with a strong performance across most key product categories. The growth was driven by progress on back order fulfillment, some level of distributor restocking and additional business at key food producers. Our business in Europe grew low single digits on a core basis with strength in culture media, Petrifilm, general sanitation and sample handling partially offset by a decline in Biosecurity products. Asia Pacific core revenue grew mid-single digits on a year-over-year basis with strong growth in Petrifilm and general sanitation offset by declines in pathogen and sample handling. Our U.S. and Canada region saw the largest impact in the quarter from the shipment delays in our main distribution center, with core revenue down in the mid-single-digit range. Despite the impact, Petrifilm did see a modest level of growth which was offset by declines in most other food safety product categories. In the Animal Safety segment, performance was mixed with Vet Instruments in Animal Care, offset by declines in biosecurity and genomics. Gross margin in the quarter was 47.9%, representing a decrease of 300 basis points from 50.9% in the same quarter a year ago. Adjusting for transaction and integration-related costs, the gross margin decline in Q4 was about 210 basis points. The decline was driven primarily by costs related to stabilization of our distribution and logistics operations and a higher-than-usual level of inventory adjustments. Adjusted EBITDA was $53 million in the fourth quarter, representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 22.4%, a year-over-year decline of 370 basis points. The decline in adjusted EBITDA margin resulted primarily from the decline in gross margin with some additional negative impact of transaction FX. Overall, the adjusted EBITDA margin came in below what we believe is our underlying run rate, this level of revenue by approximately 100 basis points as a result of some higher charges in the quarter that should not recur. Fourth quarter adjusted net income and adjusted earnings per share were $22 million and $0.10, respectively, compared to $30 million and $0.14 in the prior year quarter. The declines in the current year Q4 were driven primarily by the lower adjusted EBITDA. We ended the quarter with gross debt of $900 million, 67% of which remains at a fixed rate and a total cash position of $171 million. Compared to the third quarter, cash was roughly flat with outflows for capital expenditures, offset by operating cash inflows. Moving to our outlook for the fiscal year '25. We are expecting core revenue growth in the mid-single-digit range on the back of an end market environment, we expect to slowly improve as the year progresses with total revenue anticipated between $925 million and $955 million. We expect the first half of fiscal '25 to be a little wider than its usual seasonality of around 48% as we continue our focus on winning back sales following the shipment constraints we experienced in the second half of fiscal '24. Adjusted EBITDA for the full year is expected to be between $215 million and $235 million reflecting margin expansion of approximately 100 basis points and an incremental margin of over 70% at the midpoint. We expect this margin expansion to be driven by improvements in gross margin and operating expense efficiency and aligned with revenue growth throughout the year. With respect to capital expenditures, we are anticipating a sizable decrease as we move past the peak integration spend of fiscal '24. For fiscal '25, we expect capital expenditures of approximately $85 million with approximately $55 million, specifically related to integration items. We believe higher adjusted EBITDA combined with lower CapEx and the 3M working capital load in, not repeating, will result in free cash flow being well into positive territory. I'll now hand the call back to John for some closing thoughts.