Thanks Rod and good morning, everyone. Please turn to Page 6 of the slide deck as I move to a review of our segment level performance. Fire & Emergency second quarter segment sales were 245 million, a decrease of 20% compared to the prior year. The decrease in net sales was primarily the result of fewer shipments of fire apparatus and ambulance units and unfavorable mix of fire apparatus, partially offset by price realization of units in the backlog. F&E unit starts and completions continue to be impacted by critical part shortages and reduced chassis receipts from our OEM suppliers, resulting in 17% fewer unit shipments in the quarter versus prior year. Within the fire division, sales have been negatively impacted by shortages of key components, including radiators, axles, and wiring harnesses. Within the ambulance division, OEM provided chassis deliveries have decreased since our last earnings call. In the fourth quarter, our average chassis receipts from a key OEM were 54 per week. During the first quarter, receipts were varied between 12 and 89 chassis and averaged 34 per week. At the time of our last earnings call we felt the trend of allocations have improved but indicated the fill rate and timing of receipts was uncertain. Our second quarter chassis receipts averaged just 10 per week, resulting in lower than expected unit starts, completions, and sales. F&E segment adjusted EBITDA loss was 2.2 million in the second quarter 2022 compared to 21.7 million of EBITDA in the second quarter of 2021. The decrease was primarily a result of lower volume and inefficiencies related to supply chain disruptions and unfavorable mix of fire apparatus and inflationary pressures, partially offset by pricing realization. The fire business produced zero aero units and availability of parts resulted in a greater mix of commercial versus custom units, resulting in a lower average selling price and profitability. Ambulance production and planning remains challenged by uncertainty surrounding chassis receipts. Requests needed to support our production plans have not been fully allocated and the ultimate receipts have not consistently met allocation by number or type. As Rob noted, throughout the second quarter the F&E segment retained labor to address the significant level of rework associated with erratic component supply and the expectation of improved chassis availability within the ambulance business. At the end of the second quarter, we lacked chassis to run a full production schedule and beginning in the third quarter we made the decision to execute furloughs in certain ambulance businesses. The combined impact of the parts shortages and chassis constraints on our production throughput as well as the related labor inefficiencies resulted in a 35% year-over-year decremental margin. During the quarter, our KME production facilities in Pennsylvania and Virginia completed their final KME units as planned, and facility disposition is in process. Within the quarter, we received 2 million of cash for the sale of certain assets and are executing the sale of the remaining properties. Unadjusted second quarter results include 8.2 million of charges related to the wind down of these operations, which include 7.3 million of restructuring and related charges, as well as 900,000 of accelerated depreciation on buildings and equipment as it reached its final use date. We have completed the first KME unit at a new production facility. However, the full ramp of production for KME backlog continues to be impacted by supply chain constraints. Total F&E backlog was a record at 1.8 billion, an increase of 63% year-over-year. The increase in backlog results strong orders for both fire apparatus and ambulance units, as well as price actions taken in the last 12 months. We expect conversion of these orders to sales to remain challenged, and our expectation for supply chain relief that would allow for accelerated top line growth has been pushed into calendar year 2023. The midpoint of updated guidance anticipates we'll experience lower chassis fill rates than first half run rate, with improved fire apparatus sales offsetting the sales decline in ambulance. The net result is that we expect third quarter F&E segment revenue to be approximately flat with the second quarter run rate, followed by a small increase in the fourth quarter. Given the cost actions we are taking to align labor staffing levels to reduce production rates, we expect to convert second half sales at a 30% to 40% incremental margin compared to the first half. This excludes the second half benefit that we expect to realize from the closure of the KME facilities. Turning to Slide 7, commercial segment sales were 91 million, a decrease of 8% compared to the prior year period. The decrease was primarily related to lower shipments of municipal transit buses, partially offset by increased shipments of terminal trucks and street sweepers and price realization. Municipal transit bus sales declined 55% versus last year, primarily due to shortages of critical parts such as destination signs, exhaust kits, and wiring harnesses that resulted in zero shipments in the month of April. School bus unit sales were approximately flat versus last year, but revenue was impacted by a mix of lower priced buses sold during a competitive bidding environment in prior year. Within the specialty group, we are encouraged by increased terminal truck and street sweeper production, which benefited from improvement initiatives designed to increase throughput. The business had a one month record for completed trucks in the quarter and sweeper production exited the quarter at its highest rate of the year. Commercial segment, adjusted EBITDA of 4.4 million decreased 47% versus prior year. The decrease in EBITDA was primarily a result of lower shipments and mix in the transit bus business. unfavorable mix within school buses, inefficiencies related to supply chain disruptions, as well as inflationary pressures partially offset by increased shipments of terminal trucks and price realization. Commercial segment backlog at the end of the second quarter was a record 531 million, with increased orders experienced across all product categories. The commercial segment outlook anticipates a recovery of municipal transit bus shipments as dual sourcing initiatives take hold, improved profitability in school bus sales, and a continuation of the improved performance within the specialty group. We expect the commercial segment quarterly sales cadence to improve sequentially through the back half at a normalized 15% incremental margin. Turning to Slide 8, recreation segment sales of 241 million were up 1% versus last year's quarter. Increased sales were primarily a result of increased Class B unit shipments and price realization across all product categories, partially offset by fewer shipments of Class A, Class C, and towable products. Despite supply chain challenges, our Class B business continues to streamline operations and achieve record unit production. Lower shipments of Class A and Class C units were primarily related to supply chain constraints, which included shortages of awnings, windows, generators, and chassis. COVID related absenteeism and similar supply chain constraints result in lower shipments of campers and towable units. Recreation segment adjusted EBITDA was 28.7 million, up 4 million versus the prior year. Segment margin of 11.9% increased 130 basis points versus the prior year and was a segment record. The increase in adjusted EBITDA was primarily result of increased shipments of high margin Class B units, a favorable mix of Class A and Class C units, and price realizations partially offset by inflationary pressures and inefficiencies related to supply chain disruption and labor constraints. Segment backlog of 1.3 billion increased 39% versus the prior year and was an 8th consecutive record. Orders continue to be strong across all categories and dealer inventory for our products remains low. We expect approximately 55% of recreation segment sales to be realized in second half and margins to remain in the low double digits with robust sales of Class B and Class C units and improved profitability in our total business. Turning to Slide 9, net debt as of April 30th was 237 million including 5.9 million of cash on hand versus 242 million net debt at the end of fiscal first quarter. The decrease in net debt was a result of free cash flow generation within the quarter of 27 million, partially offset by share repurchases of 21.5 million or 1.7 million shares and an average price of $12.84. Year-to-date cash return to shareholders totaled 52.3 million. We also declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.05 per share payable July 15th to shareholders of record on June 30th. At quarter end, the company maintain ample liquidity with approximately 294 million available under the ABL Revolving Credit Facility. Trade working capital on April 30th was 365 million compared to 368 million at the end of fiscal 2021. The decrease was primarily a result of increased accounts payable and customer advances, partially offset by increased accounts receivable and inventory. Our third party chassis inventory, both on balance sheet and within OEM pool, decreased 22 million sequentially. On a year-over-year basis our overall chassis inventory is down 32 million. Year-to-date, cash provided by operating activities was 27.4 million compared to 37.1 million cash provided in the prior year period. The decrease was primarily due to lower net income, partially offset by the trade working capital inflow. We spent a total of 4 million on capital expenditures within the quarter. Today we update full year guidance to reflect the continuation of supply chain challenges previously discussed. We now expect sales in a range of 2.25 billion to 2.4 billion, a decrease of 100 million at the midpoint. Adjusted EBITDA expects to be in the range of 100 million to 120 million, a decrease of 30 million at the midpoint. We expect net income in the range of 14 million to 35 million and adjusted net income in the range of 43 million to 62 million. We raised our estimated free cash flow conversion 120% from 90% at the midpoint with free cash flow in a range of 58 million to 70 million. We continue to believe our leverage ratio, combined with our ABL liquidity and strong full year cash conversion positions us for value accretive capital deployment and opportunistic share repurchases. With that operator, we can turn it over for questions.