OPINION
WINFREE, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
Alyeska Pipeline Service Company (Alyeska) contracted with the Liberty Mutual Group (Liberty Mutual) to write an owner-controlled insurance program (OCIP). The State of Alaska, Department of Commerce, Community and Economic Development, Division of Insurance (Division), issued a cease and desist order stating that Alyeska's OCIP was prohibited by statute. An administrative law judge determined that "the Liberty Mutual program does not fit within the definition of an `owner controlled insurance program' that the statute supplies." The Division's deputy director, acting as the final agency decision-maker, reversed the administrative law judge's decision. On appeal the superior court reversed the deputy director's decision. Because the superior court correctly ascertained the statute's limits, we affirm the superior court's decision.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
1. Alyeska's Non-Construction OCIP
Alyeska transports crude oil through the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System. Alyeska contracted with Liberty Mutual to write an OCIP to "include[] workers compensation and general liability coverages" for Alyeska and several contractors,1 effective for three years beginning January 2002. Alyeska renewed the program for another three years effective January 2005.
Six contractors enrolled in Alyeska's program. These contractors provided a variety of services for Alyeska, including warehousing, mineral mining, security, medical and emergency response, catering, oil spill prevention, and surveying. It is undisputed that the contractors' work is properly characterized as maintenance and support — not construction. For this reason, we refer to Alyeska's OCIP as a "non-construction OCIP."
2. Alaska Statute 21.36.065
In 2005 the legislature enacted AS 21.36.065 which, in subsection (a), states that "[a]n owner controlled insurance program or a contractor controlled insurance program... shall be allowed only for a major construction project."2 The statute defines "owner controlled insurance program" in relevant part as "an insurance program where one or more insurance policies are procured on behalf of a project owner,"3 and in turn defines "project owner" as "a person who, in the course of the person's business, engages the service of a contractor for the purpose of working on a construction project."4 The statute became effective on June 25, 2005.5
The legislative history of AS 21.36.065 is undisputed. In March 2005 the House Labor and Commerce Committee met to discuss House Bill 147, a bill generally relating to insurance regulation.6 Mike Combs, a representative of Alaska Independent Agents and Brokers, Inc., suggested that the Committee adopt his trade group's proposed amendment "to clarify its position regarding [OCIPs]."7 According to the Committee Minutes, Combs testified that "there are several problems with using [the OCIP] insurance method for maintenance and repair programs" and that "[t]he [proposed] amendment would limit [OCIPs] to construction projects in excess of $50 million only and not include any repair or maintenance operations."8 Representative Tom Anderson, Committee Chair, stated the Committee would consult with the Division's director and consider Combs's proposal.9
When the House Labor and Commerce Committee met again, Chairperson Anderson introduced a committee substitute for House Bill 147 containing the amendment language Combs proposed.10 After explaining that the Division "is ultimately the bill's sponsor" he asked the Division's director to "give ... a closing with this amendment, what it does and the change to the bill...."11 The Division's director testified with respect to OCIPs:
There have been times when that ability [to have an OCIP] has been attempted to expand into other than construction projects, for example, maintenance projects, ongoing things that in our mind OCIPs were never intended to do, and our concern with the ability to do that for things other than large, one-time construction projects is that it takes one premium out of an already fragile marketplace.12
The Committee approved the committee substitute.13
The Division's director also testified before the House Finance Committee.14 The director stated that OCIPs "are designed for major construction projects" and that the proposed amendment "is a prohibition against expanding them into other types of things than large construction projects."15 The amendment was adopted and the bill was moved out of committee.16
The Division's director made additional statements about OCIPs before two Senate committees. The director expressed concern to the Senate Labor and Commerce Committee about OCIPs expanding into non-construction projects.17 Similarly at the Senate Finance Committee meeting the director testified that OCIPs were appropriate only for large construction projects and not for non-construction projects.18 Senator Lyda Green, the Committee co-chairperson, understood the director's testimony to mean that an OCIP "`should not morph' into an ongoing insurance program."19
The legislative history includes neither committee reports nor statements by non-committee-member legislators indicating the full legislature's intent in passing the final bill.
B. Proceedings
In November 2006 the Division issued Liberty Mutual a cease and desist order listing seven compliance issues. Count One stated that Alyeska's OCIP was prohibited under Alaska law because "[i]n its present form, the OCIP is designed to cover on-going maintenance and is not restricted to a large construction project in violation of AS 21.36.065." Liberty Mutual requested an administrative hearing. The administrative law judge granted Alyeska's request to intervene.20
Alyeska filed a motion for partial summary adjudication arguing that (1) by its express language AS 21.36.065 applies only to construction OCIPs and therefore does not apply to its non-construction OCIP, and (2) even if AS 21.36.065 did govern non-construction OCIPs, Alyeska's OCIP falls within a statutory exception.21
The administrative law judge granted Alyeska's motion, determining "the Liberty Mutual program does not fit within the definition of an `owner controlled insurance program' that the statute supplies." Based on the statute's plain language, the administrative law judge concluded AS 21.36.065 "addresses only construction OCIPs," and therefore does not govern Alyeska's non-construction OCIP. The administrative law judge was not persuaded that the statute's legislative history compelled a different conclusion. According to the administrative law judge, the legislation proposed by the trade group "was misdrafted. While the surrounding documentation makes perfectly clear the group's intent to `prohibit[] the use of OCIP[s] ... outside the construction industry,' the group's private attorney wrote language that instead defined non-construction OCIPs out of the scope of the legislation, leaving them unregulated."
After the Division and Alyeska filed proposals for agency action,22 the Division's deputy director, acting as the final agency decision-maker, issued a decision and final order in October 2007. Determining that the statute is ambiguous and that the legislative history supported the Division's position, the deputy director found that Alyeska's OCIP is governed by and in violation of AS 21.36.065. The deputy director reversed the administrative law judge's decision with respect to AS 21.36.065 and affirmed Count One of the cease and desist order.
Alyeska then appealed to the superior court, which determined the deputy director's decision was "contrary to the plain language of the statute." The superior court reasoned that notwithstanding the legislative history, AS 21.36.065 restricts only construction OCIPs. It stated that:
It [is] one thing to use legislative history to correct a drafting error when that error is obvious or the error imposes a restriction on the persons subject to the legislation that was never intended by the legislature. It is another to expand a restriction to persons plainly excluded by language of the statute. In these instances, the remedy must lie with the legislature, not the court.
The superior court also rejected Alyeska's argument that its OCIP falls within two exceptions under AS 21.36.065(b).
The Division appeals regarding the application of AS 21.36.065(a). Alyeska cross-appeals regarding the application of an exception under AS 21.36.065(b).
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
When a superior court acts as an intermediate appellate court in an administrative matter, we review the merits of the agency's decision.23 The proper interpretation of a statute presents a question of law that we review de novo, "adopting the rule of law most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy."24
IV. DISCUSSION
The Division claims the superior court erred because AS 21.36.065 applies to non-construction OCIPs. The Division makes three arguments in support of its position. First, the Division contends the court failed to interpret AS 21.36.065 in conjunction with AS 21.36.190(f).25 Second, the Division claims the court failed to interpret AS 21.36.065 in a manner consistent with the legislature's intent, as evidenced by the statute's legislative history. Third, the Division argues the court's interpretation does not comply with the maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius.26
In interpreting a statute we "look to the plain meaning of the statute, the legislative purpose, and the intent of the statute."27 We have declined to mechanically apply the plain meaning rule when interpreting statutes, adopting instead a sliding scale approach: "The plainer the statutory language is, the more convincing the evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent must be."28 We apply this sliding scale approach even if a statute is facially unambiguous.29 Canons of interpretation can also provide useful aids in our efforts to interpret a statute.30
Based on its plain language, AS 21.36.065 does not govern non-construction OCIPs such as Alyeska's. When the statutory definitions provided in AS 21.36.065(c) are substituted for the relevant terms in AS 21.36.065(a), the statute provides:
An insurance program [where one or more insurance policies are procured on behalf of a person who, in the course of the person's business, engages the service of a contractor for the purpose of working on a construction project ... for the purpose of insuring that person] ... shall be allowed only for a major construction project.
Through its incorporation of specifically defined terms, the statute simply was not drafted to govern non-construction OCIPs.31 The Division argues that extratextual sources or canons of interpretation reveal a legislative intent requiring us to disregard the statute's plain language. Alyeska argues that the Division seeks to reform the statute, not interpret it. We agree with Alyeska. Taking into account AS 21.36.190(f) and expressio unius, AS 21.36.065 remains unsusceptible to the Division's interpretation.32 On the record before us, including the limited legislative committee history, we must conclude that the statute was either (1) intended by the full legislature to govern only construction OCIPs,33 or (2) misdrafted through reliance on the industry trade group's proposal. Even if the latter, we will not invade the legislature's province by extending the plain language of AS 21.36.065 to govern non-construction OCIPs.34 The Division's remedy lies with the legislature, not this court.35
V. CONCLUSION
We AFFIRM the superior court's decision.36