Thank you, Kevin. As a reminder, the seasonal nature of our business becomes more obvious in the third quarter as winter subsides, and we see the impact of the decline in highway deicing sales. On a consolidated basis, revenue was $208 million for the third quarter, down 3% year-over-year. Third quarter consolidated operating loss improved to $0.6 million from a loss of $3.5 million last year. While adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations was $28.6 million, essentially flat year-over-year. We reported net income of $40 million for the quarter, driven by a $43 million tax benefit that reflects our recent acquisition of Fortress and recent changes in Canadian tax law. Specifically, the Fortress acquisition impacts our U.S. tax profile quite favorably. As we are now able to utilize net operating losses and interest deductions that our prior U.S. income outlook did not call for us to be able to utilize while also enabling us to reverse a portion of the deferred tax allowances we had taken in prior quarters. Starting with the Salt segment. Salt revenue totaled $156 million for the quarter, which was essentially flat year-over-year, despite volumes being 11% lower, reflecting strong Salt segment pricing, which rose 12%. The highway deicing business saw sales volume decline 13% year-over-year. You’ve heard us talk about focusing our efforts on more valuable business over the last year, even if that means giving up some volume. That strategic pursuit combined with the impact of a below average winter within the markets that we serve explains the decline in volumes year-over-year. Pricing for highway deicing rose 16% year-over-year to approximately $74 per ton and was an important contributor to the improvement in profitability that I will speak about in a moment. Within our C&I business, volumes declined 7% year-over-year, driven primarily by the timing of non-deicing demand. This was partially offset by higher C&I pricing, which rose by 5% to approximately $182 per ton. The C&I business has done a great job this year at maintaining positive momentum on pricing in its markets. Distribution costs and all-in product costs on a per ton basis increased 4% and 5% respectively year-over-year. The salt that was sold in the third quarter was produced and moved to depots in 2022, a period of time when we saw strong inflationary pressure on costs. So there’s a delayed impact that you see flowing through. Operating earnings for the segment were $21.7 million in the quarter, an increase of almost 75% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA came in at $36.4 million, an increase of 31% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA per ton was $24.41, which is in line with historical levels of profitability. As Kevin discussed earlier, restoring the profitability of the Salt business was a strategic objective for this year that we are pleased to have successfully accomplished. Turning to our Plant Nutrition segment. The lingering impacts of extraordinary weather that we experienced this year continue to impact our sales. Those sales for the quarter were roughly in line with our expectations. We had hoped that applications of SOP that under normal conditions would’ve been applied in the first and second fiscal quarters might shift to later in the year. Unfortunately, that didn’t materialize with sales volumes 6% year-over-year. As Kevin mentioned, there has been a change in sentiment over the last several quarters that has impacted pricing. In the third quarter, the average selling price was $750 per ton, down 9% year-over-year, and 6% sequentially. The combined impact of lower volumes and lower prices was that revenue in the quarter was down 15% year-over-year to around $48 million. Well, that is obviously not great for the current year, our view is that it sets us up for a positive 2024 from a volume perspective. Generally, we believe that applications have not kept pace with the mining of the soil that occurs through normal growing conditions and that the extraordinary weather conditions that occurred this year seem unlikely to repeat themselves in fiscal 2024. As a point of reference, California just experienced the seventh wettest year in the past 129 years, which go clearly qualifies as extraordinary. One benefit of the slowdown in SOP sales is that we’ve been able to build and forward deploy some inventory across our warehouse network. Speaking of distribution during the quarter, we saw those costs decrease on a per ton basis by 8% year-over-year as we saw a higher proportion of sales being picked up at our warehouses as opposed to being delivered by the company. I’d note that this dynamic can also influence price and that we will often take a lower sales price if we don’t have to assume responsibility for delivering the product. Distribution cost per ton also benefited from a shift in the regional sales mix during the quarter. All-in product costs on a per ton basis were up 6% year-over-year, driven by operational steps that we took following the subpar 2022 evaporation season, including the use of KCL to bolster production yields and the impact of the natural gas spike from earlier in the year on our inventory costs. The net impact of these drivers is that third quarter adjusted EBITDA declined from $19 million to approximately $12 million year-over-year. As Kevin highlighted, Fortress had its first sales in third quarter. So we enjoyed a small positive contribution from the business to revenue, operating earnings and adjusted EBITDA this period. We are excited with the quick traction that the Fortress team has gained in the marketplace. At quarter end, we had liquidity of $418 million comprised of roughly $58 million of cash and revolver capacity of around $360 million. Net debt to adjusted EBITDA stood at 3.1 times at the end of the quarter. As noted previously, we were pleased to successfully execute a refinancing in May of our $250 million of notes due in July 2024. Our focus as we work through that refinancing centered on four objectives. Refinancing on reasonable pricing terms, pushing out our debt maturity profile, bolstering our liquidity, and creating flexibility within the credit agreement to accommodate a wide range of potential non-debt financing sources to fund our lithium efforts in the coming years. I believe that we achieved each of these objectives as part of the refinancing. Moving on to our outlook for the remaining of the year. In our press release yesterday, we announced a narrowing of our guidance range to reflect the fact that we are now three quarters of the way through the year. In Salt, we now expect EBITDA in the range of $220 million to $235 million. As you know, we did not adjust our Salt segment guidance throughout the year until now as we approach the final few months of the fiscal year. Our original guidance given at the beginning of the year implied a midpoint for EBITDA of $235 million and assumed average winter weather. The fact is we had a below average winter deicing season resulting in the midpoint of volumes, revenue and EBITDA all moving down to reflect that fact that the midpoint of our original guidance is still within striking distance despite a winter that was 80% of average reflects very favorable sales mix within the highway deicing business and strong C&I pricing. For reasons that we’ve discussed today and on previous calls, this has been an exceptionally challenging year to forecast our Plant Nutrition business. Despite these challenges, we have managed the business throughout the year in such a way that even though we expect to see fewer volumes for the year compared to our original expectations, the midpoint of our EBITDA guidance for this business remains unchanged at $45 million. The commercial teams in our Salt and Plant Nutrition businesses have done a great job managing price this year and have played a big role in helping the company successfully navigate a year of profit restoration on the Salt side of the business and of challenging weather conditions and demand dynamics on the Plant Nutrition side. At Fortress, we still expect that business to contribute EBITDA in the low double digit millions of dollars with nearly all of that expected to be recognized in the fiscal fourth quarter. That business rolls up into the corporate and other expense net line item, which we are forecasting, will come in at $65 million to $70 million for the year, unchanged from our prior guidance at the midpoint. CapEx is moving down slightly to a range of $130 million to $150 million. This is the result of moving lithium development CapEx down to a range of $40 million to $50 million from our prior range of $60 million to $75 million, reflecting a shift in timing that will result in capital being spent early next quarter pushing into the fiscal 2024 year rather than late during the current quarter. Our sustaining CapEx guidance of $90 million to $100 million remains unchanged from our prior guidance. At this time, I’ll share a few thoughts about the 2023, 2024 bid season. As we noted in yesterday’s press release, we’re about 65% of the way through the current North America deicing bid season. Based on the results that we’ve seen to date, we are expecting an approximate 3% increase in price for highway deicing salt next year. Committed bid volumes are coming in roughly 5% lower than what we saw last year, which is not entirely surprising given the below average deicing season we just had. Throughout the 2023 bidding season, we have continued discipline adherence to our value over volume commercial strategy with an emphasis on building a book of commitments bias towards markets that are most natural geographically for us to serve, and therefore most profitable. As usual, we will true up our projected salt price and volume on our November earnings call when the bidding season is behind us. However, 65% of the way through the season, we view the results to date as highly constructive, particularly against the backdrop of a relatively sluggish winter this year. Briefly turning to the cost rationalization efforts we have undertaken. On our last earnings call, we discussed the first phase of our cost savings program was expected to ultimately result in an annual cost reduction of corporate related expenses of $17 million to $18 million by fiscal 2025 compared to fiscal 2022. These cost savings are split roughly equally between product costs and SG&A. The second phase of this initiative relates primarily to production and packaging operations. And last week we notified the impacted personnel. Cost related to the impacted operations are generally inventoriable. And as a result, the expected benefit of the Phase 2 cost rationalization efforts will be recognized through the income statements when those products are sold out of inventory, which is expected to begin in the middle of fiscal 2024 for the Plant Nutrition business, and late in 2024 for the Salt business subject to the impact of winter weather in the upcoming year. The key takeaway is that the combined impact of phases one and two is expected to result in meaningful savings that all else equal should lower our cost structure and improve our profitability in the coming years. Finally, I wanted to share a couple of thoughts on valuation. Notwithstanding the recent rally at our share price, a classic sum-on-the-parts valuation buildup of our company’s valuation where you assign reasonable multiples to the long run earnings power of our core Salt and Plant Nutrition businesses, we believe continues to support a stock price higher than where we are trading today. If London contemplates the earnings potential of the growth opportunities that we have at Fortress and with our planned lithium development, it's clear why we're excited about the opportunity to create shareholder value by accelerating our earnings growth and reducing our weather sensitivity by advancing into near adjacencies that align with our core competencies as a company. With that, I'll turn it back to the operator to open the lines for Q&A. Operator?