Thank you, Taryn. Total revenue for Q2 2023 was $476 million, a decrease of 16%. We are in a climate of softening demand with revenue for the quarter coming up 4 points short of our midpoint expectation. Clients are certainly becoming more cost conscious with many of our clients making the choice to only fill their most critical job openings while taking a wait-and-see approach for other jobs. We posted a net loss of $7 million, down from net income of $24 million in Q2 last year. Included in our results is a non-cash impairment charge of $9 million. The impairment charge is mostly tied to a goodwill write down in PeopleScout’s MSP business in conjunction with lower demand expectations. Adjusted net income was $5 million, down from $27 million, while adjusted EBITDA declined to $11 million versus $39 million. Gross margin of 27.4% was down 40 basis points. This was driven by a drop in PeopleScout revenue mix and a mix increase in PeopleReady’s renewable energy business, which carries a lower gross margin than the blended business, in part due to contingent employee travel expenses that do not include a markup. This was partially offset by better workers’ compensation results from the favorable development of prior year reserves, as well as disciplined pricing in our PeopleReady business. Our PeopleReady business delivered its ninth consecutive quarter of positive spread between bill rate and pay rate inflation. SG&A decreased $1 million, or 1%. In the prior year, there was a $3 million benefit in incentive-related costs associated with the departure of our CEO. Excluding this event, SG&A was down 3% in Q2 this year. In Q1 this year, actions were taken to reduce costs by about $10 million and similar actions were taken in Q2, bringing the total cost savings for this year to about $20 million. We are also seeing additional inflation in our costs, most notably medical benefits, which is a factor in our cost savings netting to about $10 million for the year. Despite our pre-tax loss, we incurred $1 million in income tax expense for the quarter primarily due to the non-deductible nature of the goodwill impairment charge. For the year, we expect income tax benefit of $2 million to $3 million as a result of our job tax credits exceeding the income tax associated with our pre-tax income. Now, let’s turn to the specific results of our segments. PeopleReady is our largest segment, representing 57% of trailing 12-month revenue and 59% of total segment profit. PeopleReady revenue decreased 13%, while segment profit decreased 60%, and segment profit margin was down 340 basis points. The retail industry is currently our most challenging vertical due to the lower volumes flowing through distribution centers associated with excess inventories and next in line are clients in the transportation and service industries. Declines in these three industries ranged from 25% to 40%. On the flip side, construction is our most resilient market. Our renewable energy business was up 100%, an acceleration from growth of 50% in Q1 and the rest of our construction business was only down about 10% in Q2. We are maintaining strong pricing discipline to help cover the inflation in our SG&A expenses. The business produced a positive spread between bill and pay rate inflation with bill rates up 8.5% and pay rates up 7.6%. PeopleScout is our highest margin segment, representing 13% of trailing 12-month revenue and 30% of total segment profit. PeopleScout revenue decreased 33%, while segment profit decreased 57%, and segment profit margin was down 820 basis points, but still produced a healthy segment profit margin of 15%. Demand was softer across an assortment of industries with some clients initiating hiring freezes and some attempting to use internal resources to fill jobs. Demand for our services has also moderated as many of our clients are seeing lower levels of employee turnover in comparison with peak levels in the prior year. PeopleManagement represents 30% of trailing 12-month revenue and 11% of total segment profit. PeopleManagement revenue decreased 13%, while segment profit decreased 47%, and segment profit margin was down 100 basis points. Demand declined in both on-site and commercial driving services as economic uncertainty led to lower client volumes. Now, let’s turn to the balance sheet. The balance sheet is in great shape. We finished the quarter with $50 million in cash, no debt and $200 million of borrowing availability. Before we wrap up, I’d like to take a moment to provide additional color on one of our forward-looking items. We expect a revenue decline of 16% to 12% in Q3 2023. While the mid-point decline of 14% is an improvement compared to the Q2 decline of 16%, this is driven by a less challenging prior year comparison. For additional details on our outlook, please see our earnings presentation posted to our website today. I’ll add one more thought before we close. Though we are not currently where we want to be from a performance perspective, we are excited about the opportunity ahead of us when the macroeconomic environment improves. We believe the supply of blue-collar labor will remain tight for quite some time and we are well equipped to help businesses of all sorts to fill this critical workforce need. In the meantime, we are focused on positioning ourselves for a strong recovery by staying highly engaged with our customers, staying true to our service and technology commitments and remaining disciplined on costs. This concludes our prepared remarks. Operator, please open the call for questions.