Thanks, Jeff. I'll begin with Slide 11, which shows the key drivers of our 2023 performance. Our core businesses continued to generate strong performance, delivering $1.50 of incremental EPS this year. And this was in the face of headwinds from significantly warmer weather that lowered customer consumption and impacted earnings by $0.54. Higher operating expenses linked to growth in our core business resulted in a $0.47 impact, representing only 48.1% of the incremental margin. We were diligent about managing cost to offset warmer temperatures. The company was not immune to the challenging economic environment and the impact that had on interest rates. Those higher rates drove a $0.45 offset. One month of incremental earnings from the Florida City Gas acquisition generated an $0.18 uplift. As Jeff said, these results are exclusive of the contribution from Florida City Gas' $25 million reserve surplus amortization mechanism or RSAM, which was approved by the Florida Public Service Commission in June 2023. The RSAM is recorded as an increase or decrease to accrued removal costs on the balance sheet with a corresponding increase or decrease to depreciation and amortization expense. The RSAM provided a $5.1 million pretax or $0.20 per share reduction to depreciation expense in 2023. On Slide 12, you can see that adjusted gross margin for 2023 increased $33.9 million and operating income increased $7.9 million or 5.5% for the year. Excluding Florida City Gas transaction-related expenses, our operating income increased $18.2 million or 12.8%. Interest charges were over 50% higher this year as the effects of the ongoing rising rate environment continued throughout the end of the year, and we incurred additional financing costs associated with Florida City Gas. Again, despite these impacts, adjusted EPS for the year improved by $0.27 per share, representing 5.4% growth. Moving to Slide 13. Adjusted gross margin for our Regulated Energy segment was up 10.4% over last year. Operating income also increased, delivering 18.4% growth as adjusted, driven primarily by, first, permanent rate changes associated with the Florida Natural Gas rate base rate proceedings, second, Florida City Gas’ earnings contribution for December, third, continued strong customer growth in natural gas distribution operations, including propane CGS conversions, fourth, additional pipeline expansions in our natural gas transmission entities, and finally, incremental margin from our regulated infrastructure program. These factors were partially offset by the weather related reductions in customer consumption as discussed earlier. Adjusted gross margin for the unregulated energy segment increased 2.2% over last year. As you can see on Slide 14, while at the operating income level our results were down by 10.7% versus last year. Lower consumption largely from weather drove the performance, although we partially mitigated this through rate and fee management within propane and Aspire Energy. Slide 15 shows our history of strong dividend growth and specifically the approximate 9% dividend compounded annual growth rate that we have delivered over the last 10 years. This dividend growth has been a key component of the more than 12% compound annual shareholder return over the same period. We are proud of this history and are committed to continuing our track record of driving value and returns for our shareholders. Our philosophy remains grounded in the pursuit of top quartile earnings growth, which drives top tier dividend growth, as well as continued reinvestment of 45% to 50% of our earnings back into the business to support continued capital investments. Slide 16 shows our earnings outlook, including our diluted EPS outlook for 2024, 2025 and 2028. As you know, we typically provide a medium and longer-term earnings outlook, which aligns with our long-term strategic plan and outlook as well as our investment plans and expected returns. We recognize that we are now a larger company with a markedly larger footprint and more significant growth opportunities. We are also integrating a company that was a subsidiary of a much larger entity, but which is complementary to our existing operations. Therefore, this year we are providing current year guidance as an exception. Our outlook includes our expectations for integration synergies and efficiencies, as well as some of the scale opportunities that come from deploying our expertise across a broader enterprise. It also reflects the delay in margin ramp from new capital projects that we have identified given our expected timelines for the required approvals and construction. On Slide 17, we have outlined the pathway to our 2024 guidance. Importantly, we continue to expect strong contributions from our legacy assets as well as Florida City Gas. Our legacy businesses are expected to generate approximately $0.40 to $0.50 per share of incremental earnings. Florida City Gas is projected to add about $0.35 to $0.45 of earnings per share, which includes the interest cost associated with financing the acquisition. We see incremental opportunities to add an additional approximately $0.20 to $0.30 per share across the enterprise as we continue the integration. And finally, the shares issued to finance Florida City Gas will result in an impact of about $1 per share as shown on this slide. We are providing these incremental ranges to give you an indication of the relative size of the contributing factors, and we expect to be able to tighten the incremental ranges over the year as we implement our plan to get us to $5.33 to $5.45 per share. So let me touch on some of these initiatives and the levers we are pulling to achieve our targets. First, we have cost savings or synergies. This is the broadest category with the largest expected impact for 2024. This bucket includes immediate opportunities from one-off transaction synergies as Jeff mentioned, as well as additional savings we have identified. Already, we have realized cost savings by eliminating some duplicative roles, including several leadership positions where FCG team members remained with NextEra. We also achieved synergies from the absence of certain corporate and shared service costs that NextEra had allocated to this business. Offsetting a portion of these synergies though are some transition costs we are paying to NextEra until we convert over their systems. Additionally, we will also incur some incremental corporate expenses in such areas as audit fees and insurance. In addition, as you know, we have spent considerable time working to optimize our operations while fostering the culture that has underscored our success. We have worked to eliminate operational silos by simplifying our organizational structure, moving toward greater standardization of our processes, improving technology, and increasing collaboration across our businesses. We are continuing these efforts recognizing we have additional opportunities for these types of improvements across our now larger enterprise. Finally, we will continue to be laser focused on managing our payroll and T&E expenses in the same way and following the same approach we have exhibited over the last several years in managing our cost. As you can see on this slide in green, we also have a number of key levers that we are managing in order to achieve our near-term guidance that provide a pathway to achieving our long-term guidance. While we have shown some of them as equal pieces, the reality is that some of these may contribute more to our earnings in 2024 as a percentage than in 2025, and some of these areas will have a longer ramp, but a more significant ongoing impact. For example, we are evaluating a number of proactive regulatory initiatives, including considering the timing of a recovery of a portion of the goodwill and consolidating best practices among the two natural gas utilities in regards to many of the various recovery mechanisms. These are just two of the many regulatory items we are evaluating. We do know that we will continue to utilize the $25 million RSAM that we mentioned earlier to enable Florida City Gas to achieve its allowed return. On the technology front, we are already underway in the planning for the Florida City Gas billing system to convert to our new billing system. We have begun dedicating some of the Florida City Gas team members to this effort, which will continue to ramp throughout the year. We also expect to generate savings as we more broadly integrate them to our various systems. The next area, asset optimization or utilization has become another common phrase within the Chesapeake organization. We continuously look at our facilities and assets with an eye towards streamlining our operations. As we look across our larger organization, we see opportunities to eliminate duplicative or underutilized facilities and assets. We also have more strategic initiatives which provide the greatest upside when we think about the next five years. Chesapeake has consistently identified and executed upon opportunities across its value chain to generate incremental margin growth. Already, Marlin has contracted with Florida City Gas to provide backup service in their highly concentrated, but growing markets. Additionally, we are considering multiple opportunities to utilize our intrastate pipeline operations to support growth opportunities across the system. These are just some of the many similar opportunities that we are pursuing. And in terms of new capital investment, our earnings growth has been driven by the execution of prudent capital investment plans. We talked about similar plans for Florida City Gas when we announced the deal, and we are really excited about the expected capital investment opportunities created through these new service territories. In the near-term, you will see us accelerate both the safe and guard replacement programs. As Jeff mentioned earlier, we also expect to file very soon and announce the financial economics associated with three capital projects, where we will connect RNG to Florida City Gas’ system. We are also well underway on multiple intrastate pipeline projects that we hope to announce later this year. Again, while we will begin to see an impact from opportunities to accelerate infrastructure replacement programs and new projects in 2024, these will really pay off more over time and are a key driver of our 2025 and longer term 2028 outlook. As I mentioned and as shown to the right, we've already recognized benefits from the transaction in just three short months. We are committed to achieving the guidance we have established for 2024, 2025 and the longer term and look forward to updating you on our progress throughout the year. Turning to Slide 19, we show our forecasted 2024 to 2028 capital investment and as you can see, we are reaffirming our previous capital investment guidance of $1.5 billion to $1.8 billion by 2028 and we continue to expect an approximate run rate of $300 million to $360 million per year, including for 2024. On Slide 20, we show more detail on this projected capital expenditure spend for the five-year period. As you can see, with Florida City Gas, we are more heavily weighted toward our regulated energy segment with almost 90% of our capital expenditure plan dedicated to our regulated asset base. These investments will drive continued regulated customer growth, bolster the safety and reliability of our systems, and by investing in pipelines and interconnect, create additional pathways to market for sustainable fuels. More specifically, we expect to invest between $600 million and $645 million in regulated distribution growth, $435 million to $590 million in regulated transmission growth, $300 million to $340 million in regulated infrastructure programs, $140 million to $165 million in investments in our unregulated businesses and $70 million to $90 million in support of our five year technology roadmap. Turning to Slide 21. With our FCG financing plan, our top priority was to maintain a strong balance sheet and we executed a financing plan consistent with an investment grade ratings profile. As this slide shows, we accomplished our financing objectives, achieving an equity to total capitalization ratio of 47% at the end of 2023. On October 31, we priced a $550 million private placement with a weighted coupon rate of 6.54%. In early November, we raised about $380 million in gross proceeds post-green shoot in an equity offering. As a result, we issued 4.4 million shares, resulting in 22.2 million shares outstanding at year end. For the year, stockholders equity increased by $413 million or approximately 50%, primarily driven by our equity financing for the Florida City Gas acquisition, our strong net income performance and issuances through our dividend reinvestment and stock compensation plan. This was partially offset by dividend payments of approximately $44 million. We are also reinvesting about 55% or greater of our earnings back into our business to fund future capital investments. Historically, we have also dribbled out smaller amounts of equity over time to manage to our target capital structure. We will continue to follow this strategy as we carry out our five year capital plans. As you can see on Slide 22, we have a long-term debt profile that has minimal maturities over the next two years. This gives us the flexibility to execute on our robust capital plan while making progress on the integration and navigating through the uncertain economic environment. Now, I would like to touch on our financing capacity and requirements, which are highlighted on Slide 23. The strength of our balance sheet and our liquidity position supports our investment plan. We have remaining capacity on our shelf agreements and revolving credit facility, which provides more immediate access to debt capital. From 2024 through 2028 we anticipate securing additional permanent financing to support our capital projection, which we will do through an appropriate mix of equity and debt with a target to achieve an equity to total capitalization ratio of 50% by 2028. Finally, as promised last quarter post-acquisition, we will be pursuing a credit rating. With that, I will now turn the call over to Jim. Jim?