Good morning and welcome to our fourth quarter conference call. I'm excited to talk about how we closed the year. Across the company, our teams had an outstanding fourth quarter, but before I discuss the details and highlights of the quarter, I would like to revisit some significant accomplishments during 2023. Previously, we laid out our investment framework for growth as part of our 2024 strategic plan. Our growth strategy is built upon two pillars, support and strengthen, and expand and transform. When we support and strengthen, we focus on developing and strengthening our core competencies and growing our home markets. As we work to expand and transform, we grow our business with more transformative investments, both in our home markets and new geographies. Over the course of 2022 and 2023, we work to support and strengthen our businesses. In our construction segment, we strengthen our home markets by selecting the right owners, projects, subcontractors, and vendors while leveraging our local market intelligence to win more projects at higher margins. We've selected works suited to our core competencies, and we constructed these projects with high levels of customer satisfaction and without the types of claims that play the legacy work. In our material segment, we invested in our home markets through bolt-on acquisitions, equipment, and plant automation projects, and by investing in additional aggregate reserves. We have had a lot of success strengthening our home markets. Texas is a good example. According to the American Road and Transportation Builders Association, Texas led the country and state and local government transportation construction contract awards at $16 billion. The next closest state, California, is at $9 billion. As discussed on previous calls, the Texas region historically chased work across the southeast and Midwest. Since we began implementing our 2024 strategic plan several years ago, the Texas region has focused on Dallas, Fort Worth, and Houston. Although Granite has been in both of these markets for more than 15 years and has strong relationships with the Texas DOT, labor pool, subcontractors, and vendors, we missed opportunities to strengthen those relationships as we pursued work across the country. Both metros are growth markets with good funding and a resilient pipeline for a range of projects in different end markets, including transportation, water, airports, and private site development. In 2023, we applied a targeted and selective bidding strategy to leverage our strengths and competitive advantages to build a de-risk portfolio of projects. These projects have an average CAP size of approximately $30 million per project as of the end of the year. Both the size and quality of the CAP is a significant improvement from the historical CAP of the Texas region. On the material side, across the company, we supported and strengthened the business with significant investments in reserves, targeted automation projects and aggregate quarries, and the consummation of bolt-on acquisitions. First, acquisitions. In 2023, we completed two bolt-on aggregate acquisitions that added strategic capabilities to our home markets. The first was the purchase of the Brunswick Canyon quarry, an asphalt plant in Carson City, Nevada. The Brunswick Canyon quarry added 17 million tons of reserves and expanded our home markets for the integrated reach in northern Nevada. We also purchased Coast Mountain Resources, which operates the Bamberton quarry on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada. Bamberton quarry added 40 million tons of reserves. Granite have previously been a customer of the quarry due to its high-quality aggregates and strategic proximity to our home markets in the Pacific Northwest. We are continually evaluating bolt-on acquisition opportunities and believe we continue to grow our home market footprint by and through similar future acquisitions. Aggregate facility automation projects have been another focus, like our recently completed Swan Aggregate facility in Tucson, Arizona. The new plant leverages automated technology to produce aggregates of lower costs while minimizing night and weekend shifts, thereby reducing workforce challenges. The second automation project is expected to be completed at our Solari facility in Bakersfield, California during the first quarter of 2024. While not suitable for all plants, we expect to continue to roll out automation technology to additional aggregate facilities in our network in 2024 and 2025. Moving forward, we intend to continue making investments to support and strengthen our home markets. We will also look for growth opportunities through investments that will extend and transform our business. The acquisition of Lehman-Roberts Company and Memphis Stone & Gravel Company is a good example of such an investment. Lehman operates seven strategically located asphalt plants serving the greater Memphis area in northern Mississippi. While Memphis Stone & Gravel operates three sand and gravel mines, with an additional mine expected to be operational during the first quarter of 2024, having in total 82 million tons of reserves. I previously discussed the fact that we are interested in acquiring well-run businesses that can be a platform for growth. The types of businesses that we would consider operating a market that is healthy and growing that have strong leadership that will continue post acquisition, just like Lehman and Memphis Stone. They are long-standing, well-regarded companies that are positioned for growth. The acquisition expands Granite's footprint into the Southeast and the attractive growing Memphis metropolitan market. The leadership team is staying and will continue to lead and grow the businesses. We expect Lehman and Memphis Stone to add approximately high profitability between 15% and 20% EBITDA margins. We are excited to build on the platform this acquisition provides and growing the Southeast in 2024 and beyond. Now, before I dive into the segments, I'd like to touch on what we are seeing related to public funding for transportation and specifically in the state of California. As we said throughout 2023, we believe the level of federal and state funding throughout our geographies has created a market that we have not seen since the short-lived housing bubble of the mid-2000s. This strong public market is complemented by a private market in which various industries are increasing investment in their infrastructure. Together, this benefits the civil construction industry and Granite. We believe that the robust level of funding will continue and present opportunities for revenue growth for years into the future. In California, our largest market, transportation funding has translated to high levels of project awards and record CAP. Within the California State Transportation Budget, there are two areas that most correlate to future bidding opportunities for Granite, capital outlay projects and local assistance expenditure allocations. Capital outlay projects are primarily Caltrans projects, whereas local assistance expenditure allocations are funding provided to local municipalities for transportation projects. Actual and estimated allocations for the previous and current fiscal years, which end in June 2023 and will end in June 2024 respectively, show a consistent allocation level for these accounts at $8.3 billion and $8.5 billion respectively. This level of funding resulted in a 38% increase in Caltrans project awards during calendar year 2023 compared to 2022. The proposed budget for the fiscal year ending June 2025, shows an increase in the level of transportation funding to $8.9 billion despite the overall budget deficit in California. This funding is supported by the Transportation Pacific SB-1 revenue and the Federal Infrastructure Bill. We believe that these funding sources will continue to support transportation budget in California at these levels for several more years at a minimum. As a reminder, these amounts represent allocations for construction projects which will then need to be prepared for letting, awarded, and then released for construction. For example, an allocation made to a project in the current year budget may not turn into revenue for a contractor for several more years based on the time period between allocation, letting, awarded, and construction. Moving into the construction segment, it is frustrating that our really strong fourth quarter was tempered by negative impacts on the legacy Tappan