ZAHRA, J.
This case presents the question whether someone convicted of failing to comply with the Sex Offenders Registration Act (SORA)1 as a second of[311]*311fender, MCL 28.729(l)(b) (SORA-2),2 can be subject to sentence enhancement under the habitual offender act (HOA).3 The trial court sentenced defendant as a second-offense habitual offender on the basis of his prior conviction for violating the registration requirements of MCL 28.729(l)(a) (SORA-1) and his instant conviction for violating MCL 28.729(l)(b) (SORA-2).4 There can no dispute that at the time of sentencing, defendant had been convicted of two felonies. But because defendant could not be convicted of SORA-2 without first having been convicted of SORA-1, defendant maintains that his SORA-1 conviction cannot also be used under the HOA to enhance the sentence imposed for the SORA-2 conviction. The Court of Appeals agreed with defendant. We reverse. We hold that the sentence imposed for defendant’s SORA-2 conviction can be enhanced under the habitual-offender statutes because the Legislature created separate offenses for subsequent violations of SORA. Nothing in SORA or the HOA precludes a sentencing court from enhancing the maximum sentence provided for SORA-2 by the applicable habitual-offender statute. This conclusion is consistent with Michigan caselaw addressing the application of the habitual-offender statutes to other recidivism statutory schemes. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals, remand the case to the Ionia Circuit Court, and direct [312]*312that court to reinstate defendant’s original judgment of sentence of 2 to 10.5 years as a second-offense habitual offender for his SORA-2 conviction.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
As a result of a 2007 misdemeanor conviction of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct, defendant was required to register on the Michigan Sex Offender Registry semiannually for 25 years. Defendant failed to properly register and in February 2010 pleaded guilty of SORA-1, a felony, and was sentenced to 5 years’ probation, with the first 4 months served in jail. On April 30, 2012, defendant registered his address as 6123 Clarksville Road in Clarksville, Michigan. He verified that address on January 9, 2013. In March 2013, Clarksville police received an anonymous tip that defendant was not living at the Clarksville Road address, but at 211 West Riverside. After investigating, police determined that the Clarksville Road address was vacant and that defendant was staying at 211 West Riverside, the home of his spouse.5 Defendant was arrested for failing to comply with SORA. In June 2013, a jury convicted defendant of SORA-2. Although MCL 28.729(l)(b) provides for a maximum sentence of 7 years, the trial court sentenced defendant under MCL 769.10(l)(a) as a second-offense habitual offender to 2 to 10.5 years’ imprisonment.6
Defendant appealed, arguing, among other things, that he is entitled to resentencing because the trial court erred when it enhanced his sentence under the habitual-offender provisions. The Court of Appeals [313]*313vacated defendant’s sentence and remanded for re-sentencing, concluding that the sentence imposed for defendant’s SORA-2 conviction could not be enhanced under the applicable habitual-offender statute.7
The Court of Appeals noted that the “language of MCL 769.10(l)(a) directs a sentencing court to sentence the offender for a subsequent offense to a maximum term ‘that is not more than IV2 times the longest term prescribed for a first conviction of that offense . . . ”8 The Court of Appeals concluded that MCL 28.729(1), which delineates SORA-1, SORA-2 and SORA-3, sets forth one offense with escalating punishments for repeat convictions, stating:
The maximum term prescribed for a first conviction of that offense is 4 years’ imprisonment. MCL 28.729(l)(a). Thus, under MCL 769.10(l)(a) defendant would be subject to no more than 6 years’ imprisonment—IV2 times 4 years is 6 years. The trial court erred by basing defendant’s sentence on IV2 times the maximum prison sentence (7 years) provided under MCL 28.729(l)(b) because that provision sets forth the punishment for a second conviction of failure to comply with SORA. The plain language of MCL 769.10(1)(a) clearly directs a court to enhance a sentence by increasing the longest term prescribed for a first conviction of the subsequent offense, not the longest term prescribed for a second conviction)[9]
As a result, the Court of Appeals concluded that SORA and the HOA conflicted because under the applicable habitual-offender statute, defendant was subject to not more than a 6-year prison sentence, while under SORA-2, MCL 28.729(1)(b), defendant was [314]*314subject to a 7-year maximum sentence.10 The Court of Appeals described MCL 28.729(l)(a) to (c) as “set[ting] forth the penalties for failing to comply with the requirements of SORA.”11 Because the maximum prison sentence prescribed under the applicable habitual-offender statute is different from the maximum prison sentence prescribed under SORA-2, the Court of Appeals concluded that “the two statutes irreconcilably conflict.”12 The Court of Appeals held that because SORA-2 specifically applies to subsequent violations of SORA, whereas the HOA generally applies to subsequent felony convictions, SORA is controlling, and defendant’s maximum sentence should have been 7 years.13
We granted leave to address “whether the second-offense habitual-offender enhancement set forth under MCL 769.10 may be applied to the sentence prescribed under MCL 28.729(l)(b).”14
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW AND RULES OF STATUTORY INTERPRETATION
We review de novo questions of statutory interpretation.15 When interpreting a statute, courts must strive to give effect to the Legislature’s intent.16 “The focus of our analysis must be the statute’s express language, which offers the most reliable evidence of the [315]*315Legislature’s intent.”17 The Legislature is presumed to have intended the meaning it plainly expressed in the statute.18 When the statutory language is clear and unambiguous, judicial construction is not permitted, and the statute is enforced as written.19
In this case we examine the interplay between several statutes: the HOA, SORA, and the sentencing guidelines, MCL 777.1 et seq. “[A] court’s duty is to give meaning to all sections of a statute and to avoid, if at all possible, nullifying one by an overly broad interpretation of another.”20 More specifically, it is appropriate to read the sentencing guidelines and the HOA, which are part of Michigan’s Code of Criminal Procedure,21 “together with the substantive statutes that the Legi-salture has enacted that define crimes and prescribes fines and costs.”22 Thus, the sentencing guidelines, the HOA, and SORA should be read in pari material.23
III.
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ZAHRA, J.
This case presents the question whether someone convicted of failing to comply with the Sex Offenders Registration Act (SORA)1 as a second of[311]*311fender, MCL 28.729(l)(b) (SORA-2),2 can be subject to sentence enhancement under the habitual offender act (HOA).3 The trial court sentenced defendant as a second-offense habitual offender on the basis of his prior conviction for violating the registration requirements of MCL 28.729(l)(a) (SORA-1) and his instant conviction for violating MCL 28.729(l)(b) (SORA-2).4 There can no dispute that at the time of sentencing, defendant had been convicted of two felonies. But because defendant could not be convicted of SORA-2 without first having been convicted of SORA-1, defendant maintains that his SORA-1 conviction cannot also be used under the HOA to enhance the sentence imposed for the SORA-2 conviction. The Court of Appeals agreed with defendant. We reverse. We hold that the sentence imposed for defendant’s SORA-2 conviction can be enhanced under the habitual-offender statutes because the Legislature created separate offenses for subsequent violations of SORA. Nothing in SORA or the HOA precludes a sentencing court from enhancing the maximum sentence provided for SORA-2 by the applicable habitual-offender statute. This conclusion is consistent with Michigan caselaw addressing the application of the habitual-offender statutes to other recidivism statutory schemes. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals, remand the case to the Ionia Circuit Court, and direct [312]*312that court to reinstate defendant’s original judgment of sentence of 2 to 10.5 years as a second-offense habitual offender for his SORA-2 conviction.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
As a result of a 2007 misdemeanor conviction of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct, defendant was required to register on the Michigan Sex Offender Registry semiannually for 25 years. Defendant failed to properly register and in February 2010 pleaded guilty of SORA-1, a felony, and was sentenced to 5 years’ probation, with the first 4 months served in jail. On April 30, 2012, defendant registered his address as 6123 Clarksville Road in Clarksville, Michigan. He verified that address on January 9, 2013. In March 2013, Clarksville police received an anonymous tip that defendant was not living at the Clarksville Road address, but at 211 West Riverside. After investigating, police determined that the Clarksville Road address was vacant and that defendant was staying at 211 West Riverside, the home of his spouse.5 Defendant was arrested for failing to comply with SORA. In June 2013, a jury convicted defendant of SORA-2. Although MCL 28.729(l)(b) provides for a maximum sentence of 7 years, the trial court sentenced defendant under MCL 769.10(l)(a) as a second-offense habitual offender to 2 to 10.5 years’ imprisonment.6
Defendant appealed, arguing, among other things, that he is entitled to resentencing because the trial court erred when it enhanced his sentence under the habitual-offender provisions. The Court of Appeals [313]*313vacated defendant’s sentence and remanded for re-sentencing, concluding that the sentence imposed for defendant’s SORA-2 conviction could not be enhanced under the applicable habitual-offender statute.7
The Court of Appeals noted that the “language of MCL 769.10(l)(a) directs a sentencing court to sentence the offender for a subsequent offense to a maximum term ‘that is not more than IV2 times the longest term prescribed for a first conviction of that offense . . . ”8 The Court of Appeals concluded that MCL 28.729(1), which delineates SORA-1, SORA-2 and SORA-3, sets forth one offense with escalating punishments for repeat convictions, stating:
The maximum term prescribed for a first conviction of that offense is 4 years’ imprisonment. MCL 28.729(l)(a). Thus, under MCL 769.10(l)(a) defendant would be subject to no more than 6 years’ imprisonment—IV2 times 4 years is 6 years. The trial court erred by basing defendant’s sentence on IV2 times the maximum prison sentence (7 years) provided under MCL 28.729(l)(b) because that provision sets forth the punishment for a second conviction of failure to comply with SORA. The plain language of MCL 769.10(1)(a) clearly directs a court to enhance a sentence by increasing the longest term prescribed for a first conviction of the subsequent offense, not the longest term prescribed for a second conviction)[9]
As a result, the Court of Appeals concluded that SORA and the HOA conflicted because under the applicable habitual-offender statute, defendant was subject to not more than a 6-year prison sentence, while under SORA-2, MCL 28.729(1)(b), defendant was [314]*314subject to a 7-year maximum sentence.10 The Court of Appeals described MCL 28.729(l)(a) to (c) as “set[ting] forth the penalties for failing to comply with the requirements of SORA.”11 Because the maximum prison sentence prescribed under the applicable habitual-offender statute is different from the maximum prison sentence prescribed under SORA-2, the Court of Appeals concluded that “the two statutes irreconcilably conflict.”12 The Court of Appeals held that because SORA-2 specifically applies to subsequent violations of SORA, whereas the HOA generally applies to subsequent felony convictions, SORA is controlling, and defendant’s maximum sentence should have been 7 years.13
We granted leave to address “whether the second-offense habitual-offender enhancement set forth under MCL 769.10 may be applied to the sentence prescribed under MCL 28.729(l)(b).”14
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW AND RULES OF STATUTORY INTERPRETATION
We review de novo questions of statutory interpretation.15 When interpreting a statute, courts must strive to give effect to the Legislature’s intent.16 “The focus of our analysis must be the statute’s express language, which offers the most reliable evidence of the [315]*315Legislature’s intent.”17 The Legislature is presumed to have intended the meaning it plainly expressed in the statute.18 When the statutory language is clear and unambiguous, judicial construction is not permitted, and the statute is enforced as written.19
In this case we examine the interplay between several statutes: the HOA, SORA, and the sentencing guidelines, MCL 777.1 et seq. “[A] court’s duty is to give meaning to all sections of a statute and to avoid, if at all possible, nullifying one by an overly broad interpretation of another.”20 More specifically, it is appropriate to read the sentencing guidelines and the HOA, which are part of Michigan’s Code of Criminal Procedure,21 “together with the substantive statutes that the Legi-salture has enacted that define crimes and prescribes fines and costs.”22 Thus, the sentencing guidelines, the HOA, and SORA should be read in pari material.23
III. ANALYSIS
A. THE HABITUAL OFFENDER ACT
In 1927, Michigan enacted the HOA as part of Chapter IX of the Code of Criminal Procedure.24 It contains three sections to enhance sentences imposed [316]*316on recidivist offenders. MCL 769.10 applies to those sentenced for their second felony convictions, MCL 769.11 applies to those sentenced for their third felony convictions, and MCL 769.12 applies to those sentenced for their fourth or higher felony convictions. This Court has repeatedly stated that, by enacting the HOA, “the legislature did not intend to make a separate substantive crime out of being a habitual offender but rather, for deterrent purposes, intended to augment the punishment for second or subsequent offenses.”25
Importantly, in 1998 the Legislature expressly instructed courts when enhancement under the HOA is inapplicable. Each of the three enhancement sections states: “A conviction shall not be used to enhance a sentence under this section if that conviction is used to enhance a sentence under a statute that prohibits use of the conviction for further enhancement under this section.”26 We presume, as we must, that the Legislature was well aware of these provisions of the HOA when it amended SORA in 1999 to create SORA-1, SORA-2, and SORA-3.27 We also presume that the Legislature was aware that Michigan courts had applied the HOA to other recidivism criminal statutes at the time the pertinent provisions of SORA became law.28 Significantly, the Legislature added nothing to SORA to exempt it from application of the HOA.
[317]*317The Legislature has also demonstrated that when it intends to do so, it is able to exclude particular categories of felonies from the HOA.29 For example, the HOA was amended in 1978 to explicitly exclude application of the HOA to subsequent major controlled substance offenses by adding the following language to MCL 769.10 and substantially similar language to MCL 769.11 and MCL 769.12:
If the subsequent felony is a major controlled substance offense, the person shall be punished as provided by Act No. 196 of the Public Acts of 1971, as amended, being sections 335.301 to 335.367 of the Michigan Compiled Laws.[30]
The HOA makes no such exception for convictions under SORA’s recidivism provisions, MCL 28.729(l)(a), (b), and (c). The Legislature has amended various criminal statutes to expressly prohibit application of the HOA to an offense,31 but it has not seen fit [318]*318to adopt a similar exception for SORA-2 and SORA-3 convictions, although it has had numerous opportunities to do so.32
There being no statutory bar to the application of the HOA to SORA, the trial court sentenced defendant as a second-offense habitual offender under MCL 769.10(l)(a), which states:
If a person has been convicted of a felony or an attempt to commit a felony . . . and that person commits a subsequent felony within this state, the person shall be punished upon conviction of the subsequent felony... as follows:
(a) If the subsequent felony is punishable upon a first conviction by imprisonment for a term less than life, the court. . . may place the person on probation or sentence the person to imprisonment for a maximum term that is [319]*319not more than IV2 times the longest term prescribed for a first conviction of that offense or for a lesser term. [Emphasis added.]
Defendant maintains, and the Court of Appeals agreed, that the words “that offense” refer to violations of SORA generally under MCL 28.729(1). Defendant’s position is premised on the notion that MCL 28.729(l)(a) to (c) are merely sentence-enhancement provisions applicable when there are repeat violations of SORA. The prosecution contends, and the trial court agreed, that the words “that offense” refer to separate felony convictions under MCL 28.729(1), in this case SORA-2, MCL 28.729(l)(b). Accordingly, we must determine whether SORA sets forth a single substantive offense with enhanced punishments for subsequent violations or whether SORA provides three separate and distinct substantive offenses for recidivist behavior.
B. SORA CREATES THREE SEPARATE OFFENSES
There is strong textual support leading to the conclusion that the Legislature created three separate offenses in MCL 28.729(1).33 When the Legislature enacted SORA in 1994, it delineated only one offense [320]*320punishable by 4 years’ imprisonment, a fine, or both.34 Had that section been left in its original form, there would have been no doubt that subsequent violations of SORA. would be subject to enhancements under the HOA and, for a second-offense habitual offender, the maximum sentence would be 6 years, IV2 times the 4-year sentence. But the Legislature amended SORA in 1999 to set forth SORA-1, SORA-2, and SORA-3.35 Simultaneously, the Legislature amended the sentencing guidelines, MCL 777.1 et seq., to address the SORA amendments.36
The sentencing guidelines expressly assign felonies an offense category and offense class, and MCL 777.11 to MCL 777.18 give descriptions of the offenses and identify the statutory maximum terms of imprisonment. Before the 1999 amendment of SORA that set forth SORA-1, SORA-2, and SORA-3, MCL 777.11 (as originally enacted by 1998 PA 317) identified MCL 28.729 as establishing one offense, a Class G felony,37 [321]*321punishable by up to 4 years’ imprisonment and described as “Sex offenders—failure to register [.] ” In 1999 PA 90, the Legislature amended MCL 777.11 to list SORA-1, SORA-2, and SORA-3 as separate and distinct offenses.38 While the Legislature designated the three offenses as being in the offense category of “crimes against public order,”39 it did not assign the same offense class to all three. Furthermore, the Legislature gave different descriptions for all three. SORA-1, MCL 28.729(l)(a), is a Class F felony, punishable by up to 4 years’ imprisonment and described as “Failure to register as a sex offender, first offense[,]”40 SORA-2, MCL 28.729(l)(b), is a Class D felony, punishable by up to 7 years’ imprisonment and described as “Failure to register as a sex offender, second offense!.]”41 SORA-3, MCL 28.729(l)(c), is a Class D felony, punishable by up to 10 years’ imprisonment and described as “Failure to register as a sex offender, third or subsequent offense[.]”42 The Legislature’s references to SORA-1, SORA-2, and SORA-3 as individual offenses, its classification of these offenses in two different offense classes, and its differing offense descriptions and penalties demonstrate that the Legislature [322]*322intended these offenses to be separate and distinct felonies that elevate in severity for recidivist behavior.
Having concluded that SORA does indeed create three separate offenses, we return to the provision of the HOA at issue:
If the subsequent felony is punishable upon a first conviction by imprisonment for a term less than life, the court. .. may place the person on probation or sentence the person to imprisonment for a maximum term that is not more than IV2 times the longest term prescribed for a first conviction of that offense or for a lesser term.[43]
The words “first conviction of that offense” plainly refer to “the subsequent felony” identified in the first part of the sentence. Defendant’s subsequent felony is his conviction in June 2013 of SORA-2, which is punishable by a maximum of 7 years’ imprisonment.
We conclude that the Court of Appeals erred by interpreting MCL 28.729(1) and MCL 769.10 as directly conflicting. Defendant was charged with and convicted of SORA-2, MCL 28.729(l)(b), and not a violation of SORA generally. We must then consider the longest term prescribed for a first conviction of SORA-2 under MCL 28.729(l)(b), which, again, is 7 years. MCL 769.10(l)(a) states that the court may sentence a defendant to a term of imprisonment IV2 times the longest term prescribed for a “first conviction of that offense.”44 The Court of Appeals, by holding that MCL 28.729(1) sets forth a single offense, erroneously read the phrase “that offense” as meaning any violation under MCL 28.729. Consequently, the Court of Appeals mistakenly concluded that the phrase “first conviction of that offense” in MCL 769.10(l)(a) referred to [323]*323MCL 28.729(l)(a) (SORA-1) and that, as a result, defendant’s maximum sentence as a second-offense habitual offender would be 6 years. Rather, defendant was subject to a 7-year maximum term of imprisonment, and the trial court appropriately exercised its discretion in sentencing defendant to IV2 times that statutory maximum, i.e., 10.5 years.45
C. CASELAW SUPPORTS APPLICATION OF THE HOA TO A SORA-2 CONVICTION
Michigan caselaw also supports our conclusion that a SORA-2 conviction can be enhanced under the HOA. In People v Bewersdorf, one of the defendants, Bewersdorf, pleaded guilty of operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, third offense (OUIL-3), a felony punishable by up to 5 years’ imprisonment, and of being a second-offense habitual off[324]*324ender.46 The Court of Appeals panel in Bewersdorf, much like the Court of Appeals panel in this case, vacated Bewersdorfs habitual-offender sentence enhancement, concluding that the two statutes stood in conflict and therefore the more specific sentencing scheme applicable to OUIL offenses under the Michigan Vehicle Code “prevail [ed] to the exclusion of the general habitual-offender statute.”47
This Court reversed in part, concluding that while the HOA establishes a procedure for enhancing a sentence, it is clear that the OUIL provisions of the Michigan Vehicle Code established separate crimes.48 We rejected the Court of Appeals’ ’’forced construction that placed the two statutes in conflict,” holding that the two statutes could be read to “dovetail harmoniously,” thereby concluding that Bewersdorfs OUIL-3 conviction was subject to the habitual-offender provisions of the HOA.49
The statutory scheme in SORA, MCL 28.729(1), is similar to that currently establishing the OWI offenses (previously known as OUIL) in the Michigan Vehicle Code, MCL 257.625(9)(a) to (c). Both schemes establish three separate crimes, stating in the prefatory language that a violation will be punished as stated in the subparts and then creating a first offense, second offense, and third or subsequent offense.
Just as Bewersdorf held that “OUIL-3 is a separate [325]*325crime” from other OUIL offenses, the same is true of SORA.50 MCL 257.625(9) currently creates three separate crimes under Subdivision (a) (first offense), Subdivision (b) (second offense if committed within 7 years of a prior conviction), and Subdivision (c) (third or subsequent offense), and MCL 28.729(1) creates three separate crimes under Subdivision (a) (first offense), Subdivision (b) (second offense), and Subdivision (c) (third or subsequent offense). This is likewise true of other statutory schemes of commonly charged offenses, such as domestic violence, MCL 750.81(2) to (4). In addition, our reasoning is consistent with other Court of Appeals cases that have addressed this issue.51
[326]*326Pursuant to the statutory analysis discussed earlier in this opinion, we conclude that the Legislature intended in enacting SORA-2 and SORA-3 to elevate each offense, not merely the punishment. Thus, Michigan caselaw also supports our conclusion that a trial court can sentence defendant under SORA-2 as a second-offense habitual offender using his SORA-1 conviction.
IV. CONCLUSION
We conclude that MCL 28.729(1) sets forth a recidivism statutory scheme that creates three separate felonies that elevate on the basis of repeat offenses. We further conclude that a SORA-2 sentence for recidivist behavior may be elevated under the second-offense [327]*327habitual-offender statute, MCL 769.10(l)(a). Accordingly, the trial court appropriately exercised its discretion when it sentenced defendant to a 10.5-year maximum term of imprisonment. The Court of Appeals erred when it vacated defendant’s sentence and wrongly concluded that MCL 769.10 and MCL 28.729 conflict and that, as a result, defendant could only be sentenced to the 7-year maximum set forth in MCL 28.729(l)(b).
We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals, remand the case to the Ionia Circuit Court, and direct that court to reinstate defendant’s original judgment of sentence of 2 to 10.5 years as a second-offense habitual offender for a second offense of failing to comply with the SORA reporting requirements, MCL 28.729(l)(b). Pursuant to MCR 7.315(C)(3), the Clerk of the Court is directed to issue the judgment order forthwith.
Young, C.J., and Markman, McCormack, and Larsen, JJ., concurred with ZAHRA, J.