Thanks, Rod, and good morning, everyone. Please turn to page six of the slide deck as I move to review of our fourth quarter segment results and full year consolidated performance. Fire and Emergency fourth quarter segment sales were $253 million, a decrease of 9%, compared to the prior year. The decrease in net sales was primarily due to fewer shipments of fire apparatus and ambulances, partially offset by price realization of trucks shipped within the quarter. Within the Fire Group, completions of shipments continued to be impacted by shortages of critical parts such as radiators, wiring harnesses, and axles, as well as lower than expected line rates in our holding facility, which continues to integrate the production of KME and for our branded units. The result was a 9% decrease in unit shipments versus the fourth quarter of last year. Sequentially, unit sales improved versus the third quarter reaching the highest level of fiscal 2022 with increased shipments from several fire plants. Although below expectations, we did see sequential improvement in shipments from our Holden facility. The Holden team remained focused on balancing feeder lines to increase production levels with recent success of telling its cab & chassis and body lines to be aligned for final assembly. Within the Ambulance Group, we continue to experience unpredictable OEM chassis deliveries framing production planning challenges that resulted a 9% decrease in shipments versus the prior year. As Rod noted earlier, although we have been receiving a greater number of chassis from our OEM partners, the timing and mix of units remain varied. The ability to plan production as well as align component parts supply begins with the expected receipt date on a specific chassis. If the chassis delivery date is delayed or a different model is received, it has a downward impact -- downstream impact on the value chain. In addition to the disruption this caused to our component inventory, we have continued to experience material shortages related to supply chain constraints. Despite these challenges, unit completions improved late in the quarter with shipments increasing compared to the third quarter. Turning to EBITDA. F&E segment adjusted EBITDA was $1.9 million in fourth quarter 2022, compared to $10.1 million in fourth quarter 2021. Adjusted EBITDA margin of 0.8% decreased 280 basis points, compared to last year. The decrease was primarily the result of supply chain disruptions, labor inefficiencies, increased inflationary pressure, and costs related to Hurricane Ian, partially offset by price realization. As we mentioned earlier, production at the Holden facility have not supported the shipments of units at the rate we anticipated entering the fiscal year. In addition, slower completion of units that were booked prior to the recent inflationary environment resulted in a price cost headwind in the fourth quarter, which is the first occurrence this year. Full-year segment and consolidated price cost remain positive, but production of aged backlog remains a headwind entering fiscal 2023. Total F&E backlog was $2.6 billion, an increase of 73% year-over-year, the increase in backlog was a result of strong unit orders and pricing actions taken over the past year. Fire apparatus orders were a quarterly record and increased 23% versus last year's quarter, while orders for ambulance increased 14%. Looking into fiscal 2023, we expect typical first quarter seasonality within the F&E segment with an approximate 10% revenue decline. As our multi-sourcing initiatives take hold in the fiscal second quarter, we expect sequential revenue growth throughout the year. Segment margins are expected to remain in the low single digits as we continue to complete aged units within backlog. The midpoint of guidance anticipates that manufacturing efficiencies and more favorable pricing will begin to improve segment margins in the second half of the fiscal year. Turning to slide seven. Commercial segment sales of $111 million was an increase of 17%, compared to the prior year. The increase was primarily related to the higher sales of school buses, terminal trucks, and street sweepers, partially offset by lower sales of municipal buses. Commercial segment sales in the prior year were impacted by a five-week suspension of school bus production due to limited chassis availability. Although school bus shipments were higher than previous year [Technical Difficulty] was limited by shortages of wiring harnesses and HVAC equipment, resulting in a 29% sequential decline in unit sales. HVAC supply will remain a headwind to throughput in the fiscal first quarter while multi-sourcing initiatives are expected to improve supply in the second quarter. Within the Specialty Group, terminal truck shipments increased for the 12 consecutive quarter and street sweepers sales increased for the fifth consecutive quarter, each setting a unit sales record. Municipal transit bus shipments were limited by continued supply chain constraints of key components, primarily wiring harnesses. Commercial segment adjusted EBITDA of $3.3 million decreased 42% versus the prior year. The decrease in EBITDA was primarily the result of an unfavorable mix of municipal transit buses and rework inefficiencies related to supply chain constraints that impacted school buses and municipal transit bus completions, partially offset by increased contribution from the specialty businesses. An unfavorable mix of municipal transit buses is primarily the result of low-margin units sold during the highly competitive bidding cycle related to COVID. In the Specialty Group, efficiencies related to improved production velocity result in a three-year high margin performance despite challenges related to supply of key components. Commercial segment backlog was $526 million at the end of the fourth quarter, which reflects pricing actions taken throughout fiscal ‘22 and increased orders of municipal transit buses. Due to the chassis constraint that impacts the school bus industry, we have seen an increase in the number of school bus plus chassis orders rather than body-only conversion orders. This change in order patterns not only requires us to procure more chassis directly from OEMs, but also impacts the margin profile of the business as chassis costs are essentially treated as a pass-through and therefore is margin dilutive in the segment. We expect segment margins to trough in the first quarter of fiscal 2023 and we continue to ship low margin municipal transit buses. We expect segment profitability to improve sequentially throughout the year as we build through the municipal transit backlog. Multi-sourcing of wire harnesses, as well as the resourcing the HVAC equipment supplier mentioned earlier is expect to alleviate the supply chain headwinds within the second quarter benefiting line rates in all businesses in the commercial segment. Turning to Slide 8. Recreation segment sales of $260 million were up 19% versus last year's quarter. Increased sales versus the prior year were primarily results of increased shipments of Class B and Class C units and pricing actions, partially offsetting the increase in lower sales in towable units related to supply chain and labor constraints. Our plan to maintain the regular production schedule within the quarter as dealer inventories on our brands remain approximately 50% below pre-COVID levels exiting the year. Recreation segment adjusted EBITDA of $35.3 million was an increase of 13.6% versus the prior year. The increase in EBITDA was primarily results of price realization, volume leverage, and favorable mix, partially offset by material inflation and labor inefficiencies in the towable business. Segment backlog of $1.1 billion, decreased 9% versus the prior year. The decrease was primarily due to continued production against backlog and lower orders across product categories. Class B and Class C unit net orders have normalized to pre-COVID levels and backlog through these businesses remain at approximately one-year production. Class A and towable backlogs extend beyond fiscal 2023 at the current production volumes. We did receive a small number of cancellations in these categories but expect to regain a portion of orders and to convert to the following model year of orders. We do expect recreation segment backlog to decline throughout the year as we maintain production to a more normalized level. As Rod mentioned earlier, the timing of revenue and EBITDA in fiscal ‘23 will be impacted by global recall from a low -- luxury van OEM that prevents us from selling units. We do not expect these sales will be lost, but the timing of approximately $40 million to $50 million of revenue is expected to shift from the first to second fiscal quarter as the OEM recall fix is received and units are delivered. Turning to slide nine. Full-year consolidated net sales decreased 2.1% versus fiscal 2021. The decrease was primarily the result of decreased sales within the F&E segment, partially offset by increased sales within the Commercial and Recreation segments. The decrease in F&E segment sales was primarily due to lower unit shipments related to supply chain constraints and chassis shortages and inefficiencies related to the transition of KME production to our Holden facility, partially offset by pricing actions. As a result, full-year F&E net sales decreased 15%, 13% lower unit sales versus the prior year. Within the year we successfully repriced a portion of F&E backlog that was booked prior to today's inflationary environment. However, lower throughput segment limits our ability to realize pricing actions that were taken in fiscal ‘21 and ’22. We expect greater contribution from these pricing actions in the back half as we exit fiscal year 2023. The increase in Commercial segment sales was primarily the result of increased production of school buses, terminal trucks, street sweepers, and pricing actions. The increase in the Recreation segment sales results from favorable mix and pricing actions that resulted in record Recreation segment sales. Full-year consolidated adjusted EBITDA decreased $36 million or 26% year-over-year. The decrease in EBITDA was primarily the result of decreased contribution from F&E and Commercial segments, partially offset by higher contribution from the Recreation segment. The decrease in F&E segment EBITDA was primarily due to lower unit volume and inefficiencies related to supply chain constraints and the transition to KME production from our Holden facility. The decrease in the commercial segment EBITDA was primarily due to the completion of a large municipal transit bus order earlier this year, which resulted in an unfavorable mix of units in addition to increased costs related to inefficiencies associated with supply chain constraints and rework needed to complete units. Full-year Recreation segment margin of 11.6% was a record and benefited from pricing actions and higher mix of diesel units for certain categories and opportunities to batch-build units to fulfill elevated demand. We do not expect to repeat this margin performance in 2023. The contribution from towable and gas units increases the opportunity for batch building decreases. Turning to slide 10. Trade working capital on October 31 was $348 million, a decrease of $20 million, compared to $368 million at the end of fiscal 2021. The decrease was primarily the result of increased accounts payable, customer advances, partially offset by an increase in inventory. The increased inventory balance includes an increase of $37 million in the third-party chassis and an elevated level of work in process as unfinished units wait for key components in order to be completed. Full-year cash from operating activities was $91.6 million. We spent $8.9 million in capital expenditures within fourth quarter and a total of $24.8 million for the full-year resulting in full-year free cash flow of $66.8 million, which represents a cash conversion rate of 136%. As Rod mentioned earlier, we returned a total of $82.4 million of cash to shareholders. Net debt as of October 31 was $209.6 million, including $20.4 million of cash on hand. We declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.05 per share, payable January 13 to shareholders of record on December 30. At quarter end, the company maintained ample liquidity with approximately $308 million available under the ABL revolving credit facility and our net debt to EBITDA leverage ratio was two times at the low end of our stated target range of 2 times to 2.5 times. Turning to slide 11. Today, we are providing full-year guidance which reflects a range of continued uncertainty surrounding chassis business building, key components supply, and our expectation for increased inflationary pressure that has impacted a portion of units in the backlog, adequate earnings in the first half of fiscal 2023. Today's topline guidance of $2.3 billion to $2.5 billion or 3% growth at the midpoint. Adjusted EBITDA guidance is $110 million to $130 million, an increase of 14% at the midpoint. Given the seasonably soft first quarter lingering key components shortages and the stop-ship recall of luxury van chassis, we expect the first quarter to be the trough for revenue and adjusted EBITDA margin with sequential improvement throughout the year. We expect first half consolidated revenue to be approximately 45% for the full-year guidance and first half consolidated adjusted EBITDA to be approximately 35% of full-year guidance. Cash conversion is expected to be 90% or greater with free cash flow in the range of $39 million to $55 million. Adjusted net income is expected to be $42 million to $60 million and net income $28 million to $47 million. Full-year capital expenditure is estimated to be in the range of $30 million to $35 million, which includes carryover projects that were initiated in fiscal 2022. Maintenance CapEx remains in the range of $15 million to $20 million per year and our growth projects have internal payback and IRR targets that must be met before being approved. Expected interest expense in the range of $25 million to $27 million is an increase, compared to the recent run rate that was resolved in the current and anticipated interest rate hikes as well as an increase in customer advances. So, with that, I'll turn it over to the operator for questions.