Thank you, Dale and good morning, to everyone. I'll start by echoing Dale's enthusiasm and conviction as we continue to transform this business. As we sit here today, a little more than a year into our One BrightView journey, the future has never been more exciting. This is a testament to the hard work and dedication of our 20,000 employees working together to make BrightView better by placing our customers at the center of everything we do. This unwavering passion and focus led to our record results in EBITDA for the year alongside meaningful margin expansion. We successfully executed on our commitment to deliver a breakout year. While our transformation is not complete, we are already seeing the impact take shape in our results. Moving to Slide eight, total revenue for the fourth quarter was $729 million, which was an approximate 2% increase when adjusting for the U.S. lawn sale and the unwinding of BES, our aggregator business. In maintenance, we remain encouraged by the underlying trends in the business that will lead to long-term profitable growth, notably our customer retention improvement and our continued focus on cross selling and route density. The development business increased 8.6% as a result of the ongoing conversion of our backlog into high quality projects. As we continue to further align our One BrightView culture, we see numerous cross selling opportunities to convert development work into recurring maintenance contracts. We believe this represents a meaningful lever as we drive future top line growth in all segments of the business. Turning now to profitability on slide nine, total adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter was $105.2 million, an increase of $3.6 million or 4% higher versus the prior year period. Adjusted EBITDA margins expanded by 70 basis points which is the sixth consecutive quarter of year-over-year margin expansion on a company wide basis. The adjusted EBITDA margin in the maintenance segment expanded 110 basis points as we continue to streamline our cost structure and create efficiencies. We are now well positioned to capitalize on our strong operating leverage as we return to land revenue growth. In the development segment, adjusted EBITDA for the fourth quarter was $41 million which represented a record quarter for this segment. The adjusted EBITDA margin expanded 390 basis points, which is driven by a combination of converting our high quality backlog and further cost efficiencies. Turning to Slide 10, fiscal '24 was a breakout year as we delivered on our commitment to transform this business by taking better care of our employees and prioritizing our customers. In the past year alone, we delivered record EBITDA performance and expanded margins by 110 basis points, making significant progress from the low point in fiscal '22. We delivered these results despite unwinding BES, selling our US lawns business and snow coming in below original expectations. A 110-basis point margin improvement was driven by a combination of factors including our new streamlined operating structure and reduced SG&A, the alignment of compensation plans that promotes profitable growth and continued focus on centralization, scale advantages and efficiencies. All of these factors allowed us to execute our strategy and reinvest back into the business, our employees and our customers. Now let's turn to slide 11 to review our free cash flow, capital expenditures and leverage. For the full year our reported free cash flow was $145 million versus $80 million in the prior year and CapEx was $60 million versus $50 million in the prior year. Important to note, there is a timing impact to CapEx related to newly purchased vehicles being delivered in fiscal '24 but paid for in fiscal '25. We will discuss this more in the guidance section of this presentation. On a normalized basis, adjusting for the timing impact of capital expense payments, free cash flow still increased $14 million or 18%. Additionally, we executed our capital allocation and fleet strategy which saw more than double the amount of net capital spend on a normalized basis from $50 million to $111 million. Net leverage at the end of the year came in at 2.3x, representing the lowest leverage ratio in the history of BrightView. This lower leverage reflects the impact from lower debt levels, improved profitability and generating more cash flow alongside improved liquidity. The improved leverage dynamics provides significant financial flexibility and reduced interest expense. Moving to Slide 12, we outline our revenue and EBITDA guidance for fiscal '25, which translates to another record breaking EBITDA year and continued margin expansion and is underpinned by returning to growth in our land maintenance business. For revenue, we expect to deliver results in a range of $2.75 billion to $2.84 billion and EBITDA in a range of $335 million to $355 million. The revenue guidance range assumes the following; for land, we expect total core land revenue to increase by 1% to 3%. When including the roughly $20 million impact from unwinding our BES business, we expect total land to be approximately flat to 2%. For snow, we are anticipating revenue to be in a range of $160 million to $200 million dollars which incorporates the impact of unwinding the snow BES business which is separate from the land business. We are also implementing strategic sales strategy in the snow business to reduce the revenue volatility as we begin to shift towards more fixed rate contracts. For development, we expect revenue to increase in a range of 3% to 6% as the segment is well positioned to continue to benefit from the healthy backlog. Moving to adjusted EBITDA, we expect margins in the maintenance segment to expand by 60 to 100 basis points and margins in the development segment to expand by 10 to 30 basis points, reflecting continued momentum in the multiple initiatives that are currently underway to drive profitable growth. It is important to note these margin assumptions reflect a reallocation of quality corporate expense into the operating segments. Turning to Slide 13, we will expand on this. As we continue to focus on centralization scale advantages and driving efficiencies, fiscal '25 we have eliminated our corporate segment and will allocate corporate expenses into the two operating segments. Here on Slide 13, we present both as reported and the recast of our historical segment results reflecting the elimination of the corporate segment. Further details including quarterly views are provided in our 8-K and the appendix of this presentation. Continuing with guidance on Slide 14, we are issuing free cash flow guidance in a range of $40 million to $60 million dollars. However, as we referenced earlier, free cash flow in both fiscal '24 and fiscal '25 is being impacted by the timing difference related to vehicles being delivered in fiscal '24 but paid for in fiscal '25. This represents a $51 million benefit in fiscal '24 as described earlier with an offset in fiscal '25. Normalizing guidance to reflect the impact from the CapEx timing difference, the free cash flow range would be $90 million to $110 million. Delivering on this range would represent a three year cash flow conversion of approximately 30%. Before turning the call back over to Dale, I will provide a longer-term perspective on slide 15 of the exciting momentum we are seeing as we continue to transform this business. From the low of fiscal '22, we have increased EBITDA margins by 130 basis points and expect continued improvement in fiscal '25. From a leverage ratio perspective, we are currently at 2.3x, which is less than half of where we stood in 2022. Also, our net debt has gone from $1.4 billion to approximately $740 million and our liquidity has increased dramatically to $600 million. Furthermore, our free cash flow generation has increased from $7 million in 2022 to approximately $100 million based on the adjusted midpoint of fiscal '25 guidance. While still early in our One BrightView journey, this year's breakout year and our outlook for fiscal '25 reinforce our conviction in the incredible prospects that lie ahead. With that, let me now turn the call back to Dale to wrap up on slide 16.