Thanks, Dave I’m back and on Page 6. Here you can see our year-to-date sustainability impact and progress towards our targets. The beauty of our sustainability efforts and message and impact is that it compounds each and every day and the benefit accrues not only to the environment but directly to our customers benefit. You’ve heard us talk about various states and legislation related to clean drinking water and filtration. The leading edge of that conversation has centered around the State of Michigan and its Filter First regulations, which are now being actively implemented. We’re delighted to have worked with the state and its partners to develop the ways in which to implement solutions that will ensure that when a K-12 student in the state of Michigan goes to school, they’ll be drinking clean water. The other element of our impact is in areas that have disruptions in their water supply. Places like North Carolina with the recent hurricanes. We’re helping communities and schools with filtration to ensure that PFAS and other contaminants that are in the water supply as a result of failed water treatment plants and the saturated watershed are filtered out and people are getting safe water in what is a very difficult situation. I’m now on Page 7. Last quarter we highlighted our long term growth algorithm of market growth, plus price, plus breakthroughs and how over the last 15 years that’s resulted in a 6% to 7% compounded top line organic sales growth rate for us. This morning we’ll go a touch deeper on the market part of that equation as we head into 2025, and I’ll share the headlines and the data that everyone reads about, but also how to get underneath that to see how that impacts our business. Just to start with some basic information. Starting on the left, here’s the Dodge Momentum Index, which measures the value in dollars of all non-residential building projects in the planning process against the baseline year of 2000. The thought is that it’s the leading indicator for all future non-residential construction spending and therefore it’s generally used to monitor the future direction of construction spending. Think of it as a nine month to 12 month preview of what’s likely to start, but also realize that there’s a lot in there price, commercial institution, governmental buildings. So it’s a pretty broad view of what could happen. In the middle, the next is ABI, which is a sentiment survey that tracks a cohort of partners of the AIA member owned architectural firms and whether their billing activity for the previous month grew, declined or remained flat. To understand this just a little bit more, a score of 50 indicates a balance between positive and negative reports, while a score of 100 indicates that all firms reported improvements. A rise in the index above 50 means that more firms reported an increase in demand for design services, then reported a decline in demand. It’s important to note that a rise in the index above 50 is not a direct measure of rise in demand, because the survey does not ask firms reporting stronger demand to quantify the level of increase in demand, nor does it provide information on the size of those firms. That being said, higher readings in the ABI generally coincide with some form of growing demand. And finally, on the far right, Construction Backlog is a measure of the amount of work surveyed contractors have in their current backlog. In some ways, it’s their lead time to taking on new business and as you might guess, it’s their best estimate, assuming no delays and consistent levels of staffing. So when you look at and read the headlines of these, they all have a level of validity to them and how to think about the future. But it all varies by region, vertical and other than backlog reporting lacks certainty as to what’s really going on at the ground level, which you can begin to see in the Starts data, which is on Page 8. So here is the Dodge Starts data on a square footage basis actuals from 2021 through 2023, with an estimate through August 4, 2024 and a projection for 2025. Here we’ve split the data between institutional and commercial, and again measured in millions of square feet. First, a couple of very simple observations. In square feet, commercial is two and a half times to three times the size of institutional, largely as a function of the massive impact of warehouses, which represent roughly 55% of the entire Commercial Starts data. Second, the institutional starts just doesn’t bounce around all that much, and education, which would be everything from an elementary school to a new research building at a University, represents consistently 40% plus or minus of the entire institutional market. Off to the right you’ll see the Dodge breakdown amongst the rest of the verticals between institutional and commercial. And for institutional, it’s healthcare and recreation buildings, which includes things like stadiums, parks, public and private entertainment venues, as well as churches, dorms, government and municipal buildings. The common thread being highly specified dense, complex buildings built to last for decades and not particularly sensitive to interest rates and content rich from a