OPINION
Alaska Statute 28.80.155(0) requires the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board to notify the Division of Insurance when it determines that an insurer has frivolously or unfairly controverted a compensation claim. Upon receiving notice the division must de*983termine whether the insurer has committed an unfair claim settlement practice under AS 21,36.125. The question presented here is whether a board determination of unfair controversion is a final appealable order. We hold that it is because the board's decision-making process has been completed and its determination has an adverse effect on the insurer since it is binding on the Division of Insurance.
In an order on reconsideration entered July 28, 2000, the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board determined that Crawford & Company had unfairly and frivolously controverted claims submitted by Penny Baker-Withrow on August 80, 1996, and November 5, 1997. In an earlier order the board also found that Crawford "did not act in good faith." This finding was not modified on reconsideration. The dispositional portion of the board's order provided:
Based on the Board's finding the insurer has committed a frivolous or unfair controversion, we will send a copy of this decision to the Division of Insurance to determine if the insurer has committed an unfair claim settlement practice.
The order also provided that it "is a final decision" and that "[plroceedings to appeal must be instituted in Superior Court within 30 days...." Crawford appealed this order to the superior court, which held that there was not yet a final administrative order to appeal from because the Division of Insurance had not yet determined whether Crawford had committed an unfair claim settlement practice.
From the superior court's dismissal on these grounds, Crawford appealed to this court. We entered an interim order stating:
The question in this case is whether the board's finding that Crawford and Company frivolously or unfairly controverted Baker's claim is an appealable order. The finding was made pursuant to AS 23.30.155(o).1 Under the terms of that subsection the board must notify the Division of Insurance when such a finding is made, and when so notified the division must determine whether the insurer has committed an unfair claim settlement practice. Critical to our determination of appealability is whether the board's finding is binding in subsequent proceedings conducted by the division, or whether the insurer can relitigate whether its contr-oversion was frivolous or unfair as an original matter in the proceedings before the division. The regulations, practices, and procedures, if any, of the Division of Insurance concerning the effect of board findings under subsection .155(0) will be important in determining whether such findings are binding. No evidence or information as to such regulations, practices, and procedures has been presented.
Accordingly, It 1s ORDERED:
That this case is RemanDED to the superior court with instructions to make findings as to [the] existence of any regulations, practices, or procedures of the Division of Insurance concerning whether board findings under subsection .155(0) are treated as binding. In order to make such findings the superior court should request supplemental memoranda from the parties and the State of Alaska. In addition, the superior court may authorize discovery and may conduct an evidentiary hearing if, in the judgment of the court, such a hearing is needed. This court will REtam pending receipt of the findings from the superior court.
On remand the only evidence submitted to the superior court was the affidavit of Robert Lohr, the Director of the Division of Insurance. He stated that the division would not re-examine a board finding of frivolous contr-oversion and that it was the division's duty to determine whether the frivolous controversion amounted to an unfair trade practice under AS 21.36.125.2 He observed that the *984elements necessary for a finding of an unfair claim settlement practice "may be similar to those necessary for a board finding of frivolous controversion, but they are not congruent." 3 The superior court found that the frivolous controversion finding was not binding on the Division of Insurance, but could not be reversed by the division. The court found that the finding served as a basis for the board's referral and determined that if *985the Division of Insurance should find that Crawford had committed an unfair claim practice then the company could appeal that order. Under the interim order the question of appealability is now ripe for decision before this court.
A party to an administrative adjudicative proceeding has the right to appeal a final administrative order to the superior court.4 But sometimes it is difficult to determine whether an agency order is final for the purposes of appeal.5 We have observed that the test used in Alaska to determine finality is "essentially a practical one."6 In State, Department of Fish & Game, Sport Fish Division v. Meyer we stated that one measure of finality "is whether the ageney has completed its decisionmaking process, and whether the result of that process is one that will directly affect the parties." 7
In the present case this standard is met. The board has completed its decision-making process as to whether the controversions in question were frivolous. The result of the order will directly affect Crawford because the order mandates an investigation by the Division of Insurance as to whether Crawford has committed unfair claim settlement practices and may serve as a foundational fact supporting a determination that Crawford has committed such practices. In proceedings before the Division of Insurance the board's frivolous controversion determinations cannot be questioned on evidentiary or legal grounds and thus will be binding. Since the elements of a frivolous or unfair controversion under AS 28.30.155(0) are similar to the unfair claim settlement practice defined in AS 21.36.125(a)(6)-failing to "attempt in good faith to make prompt and equitable settlement of claims in which liability is reasonably clear"-the board's determinations will go a long way toward establishing an unfair claim settlement practice.
The fact that any decision of the Division of Insurance determining that Crawford had committed unfair claim settlement practices would itself be appealable does not, in our view, destroy the finality of the board's order. The Division of Insurance is a separate agency from the Alaska Workers' Compensation Board and proceedings before the division are separate from proceedings before the board. The division gives binding effect to the board's frivolous controversion determination and asks whether the frivolous controversion also constitutes an unfair claim settlement practice, or some of the elements of an unfair claim settlement practice. This use of the board's determination and the fact that the determination requires Division of Insurance action are, in our view, direct effects sufficient to impart finality to the board's order.
The board's findings must be subject to appellate review at some point.8 If review were delayed until a direct appeal of Division of Insurance proceedings that found an unfair claim settlement practice based on the board's frivolous controversion determination, an anomalous situation would be present. The correctness of the decision of the Division of Insurance would not necessarily be under review. Instead, the critical question could be the legal and evidentiary sufficiency of the determinations made by the Workers' Compensation Board in the collateral proceeding. The rules governing judicial review of ageney action provide that the agency from which the appeal is taken has the responsibility for preparing the "record of proceedings before the agency" including a typed transcript.9 The agency is a party to the appeal that may brief and argue its position.*98610 How these provisions would work in an appeal from a decision of the Division of Insurance that questioned determinations made by the Workers' Compensation Board is a question having no ready answer in the appellate rules. Of course, answers might be improvised, as they should be if necessary to preserve a party's right to appeal. But the need for improvisation highlights that the better answer to the problem is to adhere to the established standards of finality expressed in Meyer and look to "whether the agency has completed its decisionmaking process" and whether the result "will directly affect the parties." 11
One practical consequence of our holding that the board's determination of frivolous or unfair controversion under AS 28.80.155(0) is appealable may be to delay the Division of Insurance's determination as to whether Crawford has committed an unfair claim settlement practice. Lohr stated in his affidavit that it is the division's general practice to stay an investigation and determination pending the appeal of a board finding.12 Although we can understand the reasons for this practice, it is not required by law. Unless a stay is entered, final administrative orders have binding effect even though an appeal from them is pending.13 Thus there is no legal impediment to the division's investigation going forward during the appeal of the board's decision. Moreover, if we were to hold that the board's decision is not ap-pealable until after the division conducts an investigation and makes a determination, there would be other practical consequences. If we were to determine ultimately that the board's findings were invalid and therefore that sanctions imposed by the division must be reversed because they were premised on the board's findings, there would be much wasted effort and money on the part of both Crawford and the Division of Insurance. Whether that waste is worse than the delay inherent in the division's current practice is fairly debatable. It is enough for our purposes to observe that the answer is not so one sided, nor is the possibility of delay so critical, as to cast doubt on the application to this case of the Meyer standards of administrative finality.
For the above reasons, the judgment of the superior court is REVERSED and this case is REMANDED to the superior court with instructions to review the merits of Crawford's arguments on appeal.