Thanks, Emily, and good morning everyone. Following our prerelease a couple of weeks ago, we distributed our definitive third quarter results this morning, which include adjusted EBITDA of $49 million and 4.1 million tons shipped in the quarter. Our results for the quarter were negatively impacted by decreased coal processing and soft market conditions as well as some challenging geology and weather related issues that weighed our productivity and consequently our costs. As we continue our focus on reducing costs during this market downturn, we've made some small but meaningful changes to our production expectations, which are reflected in our guidance assumptions for next year. In general, these actions include reducing some Saturday and evening production shifts and removing sections in certain mine locations to better match production and qualities to demand, while also being mindful of our cost profile as compared to the current coal markets. In addition to these kinds of changes that are normal responses to changing market conditions, we're also in the process of ramping down at our high wall Checkmate Powellton mine, moving toward a hot idle status before the end of this year. The Chess Processing Plant, also known as Elk Run, will also idle once the Checkmate production ceases. This is the only mine or complex within the Alpha footprint that's being idle due to the current market conditions. With Checkmate being our newest mine, it was still in ramp up mode, which means costs were still meaningfully higher than what we would have expected to see at full productive capacity. High wall indexes have dropped by roughly a third since development began a year ago at Checkmate, making the mine uneconomic in present market conditions. We're also conscious of the current high wall market, which is looking imbalanced and oversupplied at the moment. Taking a mine offline is a decision we never take lightly because it obviously impacts employees and their jobs. However, after issuing a warn [ph] notice to Checkmate employees in early October, we've been successful in transferring many of our Checkmate employees into other open positions within the company, allowing us to retain their expertise while staffing critical vacancies at other locations. In recent weeks, we've concluded our annual budgeting process, which produced our 2025 expectations, including the guidance we issued this morning. At the midpoint, you'll see that we expect to ship 16.7 million tons of coal next year, or about 400,000 tons less than this year's guidance midpoint. Our 2025 domestic commitments also compare similarly, with 3.7 million tons committed, or 22% of our overall sales book for next year, at an average price of $152.51, which is about $8 lower year-over-year, on a similar relative volume. Especially given the increasingly challenging market conditions we've experienced, I'm pleased that we were able to lock in a volume that allows us to plan for a portion of our 2025 cash flows as we look for opportunities to capture upside in the export market. As we've discussed in detail in recent calls, the management team remains focused on our liquidity position and protecting our ability to continue weathering this period of lower prices. Between July 1 and the end of the third quarter, our total liquidity increased by $150 million, or 42%. The additional cash on the balance sheet allows us to fund the capital needs of our existing portfolio, while continuing to invest in important projects like the Kingston Wildcat Mine, formerly known as Kingston Sewell, which is our new low-low mine in development. Jason will talk more about Wildcat in a moment. Despite the difficult circumstances we're currently seeing in steel demand and Metco pricing, I remain optimistic about Alpha's long-term prospects. Mines like Kingston Wildcat are an exciting complement and quality enhancement to our existing portfolio. The Alpha team continues to operate safely and responsibly, even in the face of challenging conditions. October has gotten the fourth quarter off to a good start, so we hope to keep that momentum and finish this year strong. Our strong balance sheet and lack of long-term debt provide greater flexibility to manage the business in periods of market weakness. We remain focused on safety and efficiency as we monitor the market for opportunities. So with that, I'll turn the call over to Todd for additional information about our quarterly financial results.