Yes. Thank you, Jason. And look, we couldn't be more excited. We finally got into a deal with the team for Miller Electric, Henry Brown, his brother and family, and the ESOP shareholders of that company. You know, we first started talking to each other almost six years ago to get to know each other because they're a leader in our space. And we're a leader in this space. They've always had this unbelievable reputation for professionalism, care for their employees, and excellent execution for their customers. And also disciplined capital allocators much like we are. It is really an acquisition that positions us to serve our customers better throughout the southeast. And also provide opportunity to expand opportunity for the team at Miller and grow the business substantially. It's already grown substantially over the past five to ten years, but to even grow more. I think when Henry and I talked about the acquisition, it was not an acquisition based on big changes in their operation because quite frankly, they already look a lot like EMCOR. They're an IBEW leader and contractor. They run their company very much like a public company, with the care and fiduciary responsibility of what a public company does. They have training programs. They have an inclusive culture. Their values almost identically match our values of mission first, people always. And you've heard me talk in the past about when EMCOR does an acquisition, we first look at their excellence and acceptable field execution. Without a question, the folks at Miller Electric and the team there are excellent in field execution and really deliver for the customers in a safe, productive manner. Then we also go back to the main office and say, do they share our values? And we can say, conclusively, that the values of Miller Electric and EMCOR align specifically, especially around the values of discipline and integrity and trust and transparency and safety and teamwork. And then they also add to that the embrace of the community, which they would, like many of our local companies do. There's nothing we really want to change at Miller. What we want to do is take the best of Miller and bring it into EMCOR and take the best of EMCOR and bring it to Miller. And we expect a long and prosperous future. We're excited that Henry and his team are going to be leading that business into the future. And report under our electrical segment to Dan Fitzgibbons who, you know, I'll modestly say is one of the top data center people in the country. So their mix of work actually brings more diversity to us. They're about 24% data centers, 23% healthcare, 15% commercial. They know how to do the hardest industrial work. And they also know how to put work in the sports entertainment market, which is a growing part of the Florida market. They will be based in Jacksonville, Florida, and we look to grow the Miller footprint from Jacksonville, Florida throughout the Southeast through both organic growth and acquisition. So Henry Brown and his team will be key parts of the EMCOR leadership going forward. And it's about as near perfect a match of how a company's run as what we've seen at EMCOR. You take the best subsidiaries at EMCOR, you can lay it alongside how Miller's run, and they're almost identical. With that being said, I'll now move on to RPOs, which will be pages twelve and thirteen. And I'd ask you to turn your attention there, and I'd ask you to pull those pages out or look at them side by side like we have the last couple times. And what you'll see on page twelve are some key trends in market sectors where we continue to see growth. If you look at data centers and connectivity, we continue to see strong demand for hyper which we include in our network and communications sector. At the end of 2024, our RPOs in the sector were a record $2.8 billion, up $1.25 billion, or 80% year over year, and 31% sequentially from the end of the third quarter. As I said on prior calls, we continue to believe we're in the early innings of the overall data center expansion. We have successfully positioned ourselves in key data center geographies over the last several years. Miller even brings us more geography to serve the data center market. And we do that by expanding our capabilities both through organic capability building and acquisition and Windows acquisitions building more capability. I also believe we're in the early innings of reshoring and nearshoring. And it will continue to provide us opportunities for both the high-tech manufacturing and the manufacturing industrial sectors. We expect this to even strengthen more as customers invest more in capital in these sectors, as well as in oil and gas projects. Look, a lot of talk will go around tariffs. We believe long term, the equalization of trade is a plus for EMCOR. There'll be some near-term hiccups over that we will work through like we always do. But long term, the equalization of trade is a good thing for EMCOR as reshoring and nearshoring will be part of that. High-tech manufacturing, we had just over a billion dollars at the end of the quarter. That includes semiconductor, pharma, biotech, life sciences, and electric vehicle value chain. RPOs in the sector were down sequentially year over year by 18.2% and 29.6%, respectively. Look, driving this is the episodic nature of these projects, especially in the semiconductor space. You know, you go through initial phases of multiyear projects, multi-phase locations, and then they reload and get ready for the next phase. Also, it's defined as we complete it, especially in the fire protection side. Certain electric vehicle manufacturing or EV value chain projects. Look, I continue to believe, we continue to believe, our customers continue to believe, and the long-term fundamentals of high-tech manufacturing. That's especially true on certain semiconductor sites. And that's especially true in bio life and pharma. And on EVs, you know, we're going to have more share in EVs than we have today. There are going to be hybrids, and they're all going to need battery plants. And the value chain built to do that. We remain positive long term in expansion. Each one of these placed sectors in high-tech manufacturing. In addition, we continue to see a healthy base of RPOs within the traditional manufacturing industrial market sector. Go back to that reshoring nearshoring trend, which I believe we're in the early innings in. RPOs there are $863 million at the end of the quarter, up nearly 7% year over year. And then finally, looking at energy efficiency and sustainability, good long-term market for us. For as long as I can remember. We continue to excel with retrofit project work, especially within the mechanical services division of our US Building Services segment. Where we had RPOs of over $1.1 billion. As a reminder, this is focused on tenant fit-out, retrofitting outdated equipment, integrating building controls, and it's really focused on making the space better, more efficient, and also reducing usage and costs. These projects also increase overall system performance. Go to page thirteen. You're going to continue to see strong demand in healthcare. We ended the quarter with another record $1.3 billion in RPOs, up 26% from the year-ago period and 8% from the third quarter. Our water and wastewater RPOs were $683 million at the end of the quarter, up approximately 6% year over year. These projects are episodic in nature. These are big size of scope projects for us. And this is mostly a Florida market for us. RPOs in the institutional sector, which include projects where we're schools, universities, and local, state, and federal buildings were up 18% year over year, coming in at a record $1.1 billion. Spending on research facilities, new classroom space, technology upgrades across campuses, renovation retrofits with indoor air quality and reduced energy consumption is really what's driving demand in this market sector. Transportation RPOs grew 12% year over year to $294 million, largely driven by airport construction. And then finally, we had short duration projects of $457 million. Go back to all the retrofit projects we talked about. This is about energy-efficient, smarter, cleaner, and more productive buildings. Partially offsetting our RPO increases were expected declines in commercial, and there's no surprises there. Although, I will say, see what happens now. At the back half of 2025 and into 2026, as return to office mandates become more prevalent. And then buildings will be retrofitted because they really have some of them haven't been occupied for five or six years. As I mentioned earlier, total company RPOs at the end of the fourth quarter were $10.1 billion, up $1.25 billion or 14.2% year over year. Miller will add another $700 million next sort of December 31st sort of similar number. That will be additive to that $10.1 billion. We're pleased with the RPO performance, particularly in light of that strong revenue growth we had through the year and in the fourth quarter. It demonstrates continued strong demand for our services, and we are pleased with our project pipeline, which remains strong and diverse. I get ahead of you on the question on this. Obviously, with the margins Jason talked about, we believe what we have in RPOs is very similar to what we executed over the past year. And we also believe what we're bidding on now is very similar with our outlook we gave you to what we've done over the last two years. So in closing, I'm going to go to page fourteen. Obviously, 2024 was another great year for EMCOR, another record year. Our team accomplished much, and with the addition of Miller Electric on February 3rd, I talked about this. We already added another great team to our already solid foundation for future growth. For 2025 and beyond. As we set our 2025 guidance, obviously, we while acknowledging, you know what, there's challenges in the broader economic environment, you know, you copy and paste from year to year? There's always challenges in the broader economic environment. And in order to adjust these challenges, we will do what we always have done, you focus on what you control, and you execute well, you continuously plan for what you don't control. Don't overcommit your resources, and you continue to develop the right leaders and you continue to retrain, train, and develop leaders and also the best-skilled workforce in the industry. If you do that, things tend to work out okay. What we do know is these things. We should continue to earn our customers' confidence to build and service their most project challenging campuses, buildings, and manufacturing plants. As such, we believe that our diverse market sectors provide the opportunity for us to grow our business to $16.1 to $16.9 billion in revenues, and that's inclusive of the Miller acquisition. We expect to earn diluted earnings per share between $22.25 and $24. We expect our operating margins, pre-Miller, to continue to be strong and anticipate Miller will perform well. But intangible asset amortization, Jason went through all this in the first year of an acquisition. You take EMCOR overall. He talked about this. It's going to nick us between 25 to 30 basis points for the full year. Also, just to be clear, and I think I've said this nine out of the last ten years and I might have missed one, it's always important for people to remember this is not a quarter-to-quarter business. Project timing and customer releases and all always go as planned. Right? And so guys plan quarterly. We don't. We recognize that we may need to overcome headwinds from potential tariffs, which may be negative in the short term. And I said this, I believe long term, that'll be positive for us as it may drive more reshoring. We also see volatility around supply chains. I just think that's a constant state of business now. It could and a global supply chain will continue to face challenges and uncertainty. Further, we understand that the new administration may delay our end funding under certain legislation and it probably benefited our customers. Overall, we will manage these uncertainties as we always have. We're going to be vigilant on cost, vigilant on planning, and vigilant on pricing and contractual terms. We're going to bring prefabrication and automation to bear to keep our costs under control. We'll keep our SG&A costs under control, and we won't overcommit to either contracts or schedule. We will continue to be balanced capital allocators. We will allocate more capital to acquisitions. We allocated more than 2024, and we will continue to allocate acquisitions for the remainder of 2025. We expect the acquisition market to remain active. We'll continue to invest organically. We'll continue to return cash to shareholders as evidenced by the expansion of our share repurchase program. Thanks to our teammates for taking care of each other, living our values of mission first, people always, and continuing to work in a safe and productive way to deliver exceptional value to our customers. With that, I'll take questions. Betsy, over to you.