Well, thank you Jason, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today. Please turn to Slide 3. To begin today, I would like to acknowledge the impact of the recent devastation in the Southeast over the past few weeks. Hurricane Helene, shortly followed by Hurricane Milton, caused significant damage, including historic flooding, widespread power outages, and multiple deaths across the southeast. Our Greenville, South Carolina office did sustain moderate damage, but thanks to our HSE and facilities management team, the office remained open and functional. However, almost all of our employees in the area were personally affected in some way. In the face of this tragedy, we are helping communities. For example, the North Carolina Department of Transportation requested assistance from the I-26 Fluor United Asheville team, and we promptly responded. The crews worked to clear roadways and provide temporary repairs, enabling utility teams to reach impacted areas and restore access for affected residents. All States impacted by Hurricane Helene and Milton are in Fluor's FEMA public assistance contract. Mission Solutions has more than 200 people deployed in the southeast, and expect at least 300 more to be deployed in the near future. Our thoughts go out to all families and residents impacted by these hurricanes, and we are honored to be supporting numerous communities in their recovery efforts. Now, let's turn to our operating review, beginning on Slide 4. Revenue for the third quarter was $4.1 billion. Consolidated new awards for the third quarter were $2.7 billion, and included awards for a downstream project in Mexico and a Mining and Metals project in Australia. Based on our new awards for the quarter, our total backlog is now $31.3 billion, of which 80% is reimbursable. Margins on new awards in the quarter continued to underpin our expected segment margin range. This is driven in part by the strength in our services margins, which have been in the 20% range for our traditional EPCM businesses this year. Moving to our business segments, please turn to Slide 6. Urban Solutions, our most diversified group, reported segment profit of $68 million. New awards were $828 million in the third quarter, and ending backlog was $19 billion, a 72% increase in the past 12 months. Results in this segment reflect a ramp up of execution activities on multiple advanced technology and Life Sciences projects. Now, please turn to Slide 7. During the quarter, Mining and Metals received a $289 million incremental award for a rare Earth minerals refinery in Australia. Representing almost half of Urban Solutions backlog, the Mining and Metals business line continues to be well positioned for large EPC projects in the near-term, including a port debottlenecking project in Australia, and lithium work in the United States. The longer-term focus for clients in this space remains positive. For example, BHP notified us last week that we were awarded the Minera Escondida Concentrator Program in Chile. We'll start the selection phase study for this mega project in the fourth quarter. Moving to Slide 8, in Advanced Technologies and Life Sciences, our focus for 2024 remains centered on talent allocation and development to support unprecedented market demand. New awards for the quarter included an incremental award for the current phase of our existing Eli Lilly project in Indiana, and the design award for the next phase of this mega project. Backlog for ATLS has increased nearly 90% over the past year. In the data center market, we continue to engage with large tech companies and expect growth in the first half of 2025 to reflect their expanding CapEx plans. We also believe that the size and supply chain requirements for these mega facilities represent a sweet spot for Fluor. In preparation for this work, we are not standing still. The company is working on several competitive advantages for data center execution. Currently, we are developing innovative cooling process concepts, and we've completed work with a client to develop offsite modularization design and production processes that will expedite the buildout of data centers. In the semiconductor space, we continue to be engaged with Intel on select projects. However, a large manufacturing facility where we were providing early work support has been canceled. Despite the cancellation, the market remains robust, and we are redeploying that team to other ATLS projects. Our relationship with Intel continues to be strong. Over in Life Sciences, work continued to progress on the Eli Lilly facility in Indiana. Recent activities include the installation of siding and glazing on the pharmaceutical facility’s central utilities building. Looking ahead, we see the opportunity for significant additional work for this client as well as other Life Sciences projects in Europe and in the US. Please turn to Slide 9. In infrastructure, we made considerable progress on both legacy and non-legacy projects in the quarter. On the Gordie Howe International Bridge Project, the team is headed towards its next major milestone, which is completion of the bridge overlay. At the LAX Automated People Mover project in Los Angeles, our joint venture has obtained final approval for the settlement we recognized last quarter. And in October, our JV consortium that built the Mario M. Cuomo Bridge filed a $1 billion breach of contract lawsuit against the New York State Thruway Authority for costs incurred before the bridge was successfully completed six years ago. Despite there being a clearly outlined dispute resolution process in our contract, it is disappointing that the New York State Thruway Authority has chosen to delay its liability for this bridge. Moving on to Slide 10. Mission Solutions reported segment profit of $45 million for the third quarter, driven in part by increased execution activities on two DOE contracts. New awards for the quarter were $274 million, and ending backlog for the quarter was $3.1 billion. Last quarter, we received notices to proceed on two projects, the Pantex management and operations contract, and the Air Force test operations and sustainment contract. I'm pleased to report that we've had seamless handovers and are now fully executing both mega programs. As we announced last month, the Fluor joint venture received a notice to proceed on the Hanford Integrated Tank Disposition Contract. The contract has an estimated ceiling of $45 billion over a 10-year period for environmental management operations in Washington State. As a minority partner, Fluor will recognize its share of earnings from this new program using the equity method of accounting, starting in the fourth quarter of 2024. We're also pleased to announce that the National Nuclear Security Administration has selected a team that includes Fluor to conduct a year-long engineering study for a centrifuge pilot plan. Fluor will be the EPC service provider for the activity. This initiative, part of NNSA's Domestic Uranium Enrichment Centrifuge Experiment Program, seeks to maintain an advanced uranium enrichment technology for US national security needs. Continuing on this nuclear theme, the Department of Energy is rolling out plans for the domestic supply of high-assay, low-enriched uranium enrichment and deconversion facilities. Fluor has been selected as one of a few partners for both of these activities to help with developing a path forward. Near-term prospects for Mission Solutions include an extension with the DOE for Portsmouth and Pikes in Ohio, and additional work in the intelligent services space. Now please turn to Slide 11. In Energy Solutions, segment profit was $50 million for the third quarter. Results reflected lower than expected contributions from a large project in the late stages of completion, and $18 million in cost growth on a construction-only subcontract executed by our joint venture partner in Mexico. More specifically on this project, the joint venture is close to an agreement that will address costs from now until project completion in 2025. New awards for the quarter totaled $1.5 billion and included the full notice to proceed on a downstream project in Mexico, as well as an award for a large refinery unit in Texas. In Q3, we started the next phase of engineering and design work for RoPower's small modular nuclear reactor project in Romania, utilizing NuScale’s industry-leading technology. We continue to see strong interest in SMRs and traditional nuclear, both of which are viable carbon-free solutions for power generation. In addition to the SMR engineering work for RoPower, we are making great progress on securing a reimbursable front-end award for two conventional nuclear reactors in Romania. So, more to come on that front. With regard to LNG Canada, this project is now over 95% complete and systems handover to the client is progressing. During the quarter, the team achieved a fuel gassed in milestone. And in October, we started offloading refrigerants at the port, and executed a startup operations for the refrigerant compressors. This project is on track to support LNG Canada's plan to ship first cargoes in 2025. The project continues to meet management expectations. Over the next few quarters, Energy Solutions prospects include support for battery chemicals and the chemical recycling industries, with traditional upstream, petrochemicals, and LNG power projects following thereafter. Please turn to Slide 12. Before I turn the call over to Jim, I wanted to share some of my observations as we close out 2024 and head into 2025 and beyond. Last quarter, we discussed the tremendous progress we made under our building a better future strategy, and it was time to develop plans for our next chapter. I see a few themes that will be underpinning our next strategic planning cycle. First, as several EPC projects wind down in Energy Solutions, the expected conversion of feed packages to EPC awards has not yet come to fruition. This is due in part to delays in energy transition and to our risk management discipline that has served us well. For perspective, over the past three years, we've no bid over $20 billion of projects in Energy Solutions due to unfavorable risk or contractual conditions. In the near-term, the combination of traditional energy, energy transition, and low carbon power projects, will drive feed packages. Fluor continues to play a significant role in the chemical space, including large liquids to chemical project programs in the Middle East. In Urban Solutions, we have greater potential than originally envisioned. While we have mobilized significant resources into this space, opportunity demands that we deploy additional capacity to capitalize on these time to market-focused projects. And lastly, in Mission Solutions, we continue to have great success in the environmental remediation market. The next phase of growth will be driven by work in the national security market and nuclear fuel arenas. Our ability to be a trusted partner will also be predicated on having high quality technical experts ready to support the US government. And just to note here this week, we are pleased the election process delivered a clear winner. This creates an environment of certainty that our clients need in order to make major capital investment decisions. A key part of our strategic priorities was to drive growth across the portfolio. Our revenues from non-traditional oil and gas projects stand at 75% at the end of Q3 2024, surpassing our strategic target of 70%. We see strong CAGR growth for revenue and EBITDA in the next strategic planning period through 2028. This growth will be supported by robust cash generation and improved long-term TSR delivery. As a reminder, TSR performance under the current finding period is 191%. With that, let me turn the call over to Jim Breuer to provide some details on how we are already positioning for the next chapter in Fluor’s strategy. Jim?