Thank you, Stephen, and hello to everyone on the call. To recap the third quarter, overall revenue increased 20% to $646 million. Adjusted operating income of $67 million or 10% of revenue increased 46% over Q3 of 2022 and adjusted EBITDA of $101 million or 16% of revenue was up 26% over the prior year. Lastly, adjusted EPS of $0.88 a share grew 33% in the quarter. We added four new centers in Q3 and closed nine, ending the quarter with 1,063 centers. To break this down a bit further, full-service revenue increased $64 million to $445 million in Q3 or 17% over the prior year, ahead of our expectations of 14% to 16% driven by increased enrollment and pricing. Enrollment in our centers opened for more than one year, increased high single-digits across the portfolio. Occupancy levels averaged in the range of 58% to 60% for Q3 ticking down sequentially as expected, given the typical enrollment seasonality over the summer months. As Stephen mentioned, US enrollment grew in the low double-digits, while international enrollment increased in the low single-digits over the prior year. Adjusted operating income of $7 million in the full-service segment increased $10 million in Q3. This year-over-year improvement was driven by higher enrollment, tuition increases and the improving operating leverage across our broader enrollment base. Partially offsetting the earnings growth was a $5 million reduction a support received from the ARPA government funding program over the prior year and the continued cost impact of inefficient labor and agency staffing in our UK business. Turning to back-up care. Revenue grew 32% in the third quarter to $169 million, well ahead of our expectations for 12% to 15% growth and operating income was 31% of revenue, growing to $52 million. As Stephen detailed, use volume was higher than we anticipated, with strong use across care types, particularly in our school age summer programs. Lastly, our Educational Advising segment grew revenue by 3% to $32 million and delivered an operating margin of 26%. Interest expense increased modestly in the quarter to $11 million, excluding the $1.5 million per quarter in both 2022 and 2023 that is related to the deferred purchase price on our acquisition of Only About Children. The structural tax rate on adjusted net income increased to 28.5%, an increase of 180 basis points over Q3 of 2022. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow. Through September of this year, we have generated $161 million in cash from operations compared to $131 million last year. We've invested $92 million in fixed assets and acquisitions in 2023 and comparatively speaking in 2022, we had invested $251 million, including the acquisition of only about children on July 1 of 2022. We ended the third quarter of this year with $41 million of cash and a debt leverage ratio of 2.8 times net debt to EBITDA, down from the 3.25 times that that we started 2023. Moving on to our updated 2023 outlook. As Stephen outlined, we are raising the lower end of our range to the full year revenue guidance of $2.375 million to $2.4 million to reflect the revenue performance through the first nine months of the year. In terms of segment revenue for the full year, we now expect full service to grow roughly 18% to 19%, Back-Up Care to grow approximately 20% to 22% and ed advisory to grow in the mid-single digits. On an adjusted EPS basis, we are narrowing our guidance range to $2.73 to $2.78 for the year. In terms of the remainder of 2023, this full year outlook assumes that Q4 overall revenue will be in the range of $575 million to $600 million, and adjusted EPS will be in the range of $0.72 to $0.77 for the quarter. Before I close, as we've done each quarter this year, I want to quantify three discrete items that are affecting our reported margins and earnings growth rates in 2023 that is ARPA funding, interest expense and the tax rate. In Q4, we expect those items to account for an approximate $0.25 headwind to year-over-year growth for Q4, with $13 million less in ARPA government funding at P&L centers, approximately 230 basis points higher tax rate and roughly $3 million more in interest expense. Two notes here, the sequential step-up in interest expense to $14 million in Q4 of 2023 reflects the new quarterly run rate that we expect through 2024, as our interest rate caps step up this month. Also as a reminder, funding from the ARPA program at P&L centers, which effectively ended September 30, will be $33 million lower in 2024. So in closing, echoing Stephen's comments, we're pleased with the continued progress across the business this year and continue to be excited about the opportunities ahead. And so with that, Judith, we are open to questions and can go to Q&A.