The facts of this case are relatively simple. On March 10, 1988, Holly Hill Looman was put on full disability as the result of an injury she received while working at McKesson Corporation. In April 1988, she was released for light duty by her doctor, and, on October 19 of that year, she was offered a light duty assignment by McKes-son. By that time, however, she was pregnant and had been placed on pregnancy disability until six weeks postpartum. Unbeknownst to Looman, McKesson contacted her obstetrician and obtained a medical release for her to perform light duty. As she was never informed of this release, she did not perform her assignments, and on October 21, McKesson discharged her. Looman filed a grievance, and was reinstated on January 27, 1989, more than three months after her termination. Her reinstatement was contingent, however, upon her receipt of an unconditional medical release from her doctor. As she did not obtain such a release, she performed no further work for McKesson. On March 13, 1989, Looman was discharged pursuant to a provision of the collective bargaining agreement that states that “[sjeniority shall be considered broken and employment terminated by ... [ajbsence or layoff from work in excess of twelve (12) consecutive months.” As of that date, she had not worked for 12 months and 3 days.
The defendant union filed a grievance on behalf of Looman. The grievance was submitted to arbitration and, five months later, the arbitrator rendered an award in her favor, finding that the three months attributable to the employer’s wrongful discharge should not be included within the period of absence for purposes of the termination provision and that therefore Loo- *833 man had not been absent from work twelve consecutive months within the meaning of the provision. McKesson then brought an action in the district court seeking to vacate the arbitration award under § 301(a) of the Labor and Management Relations Act. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the union and this appeal ensued. We affirm.
McKesson raises two issues on appeal. Its first contention is that the arbitrator’s award was unfaithful to the contract. Courts must accord great deference to an arbitrator’s interpretation of a collective bargaining agreement and ordinarily may reverse only if his award does not “draw its essence from the collective bargaining agreement” so that he is dispensing “his own brand of industrial justice.”
United Steelworkers of America v. Enterprise Wheel & Car Corp.,
The employer contends that the term “absence from work” has only one possible meaning, that it refers unambiguously to
any
failure of an employee to appear for work. We disagree. Terms used in industrial bargaining seldom have such inflexibility of meaning.
See United Steelworkers of America v. Warrior and Gulf Navigation Co.,
In fact, contrary to McKesson’s assertion, it is far from clear that, as used in the collective bargaining agreement, the term “absence from work” is applicable to the disputed three month period. It would certainly be reasonable to construe the term as not applying to a failure attributable to a wrongful or unlawful action on the part of the employer. An employee who is barred from entering a plant is not ordinarily marked “absent”. Yet the employer’s construction of the term “absence from work” would permit it to discharge an employee whom it has wrongfully prevented from entering the plant: under McKes-son’s theory, if an employer without justification told an employee that he was barred from the plant for 12 months, the employer could wait until the 12 months had elapsed and then discharge the employee for absence from work. The arbitrator’s construction of the term avoids such an absurd reading of the collective bargaining agreement. His answer is well within the range of reason and we will not overturn it. 1
McKesson’s other attack on the award is that the arbitrator’s failure to render a decision within sixty days of submission of the grievance, as provided for in the collective bargaining agreement, ren
*834
dered the award void. We disagree. In the absence of an express agreement to the contrary, procedural questions are submitted to the arbitrator, either explicitly or implicitly, along with the merits of the dispute.
See United Paperworkers Int’l Union v. Misco, Inc.,
Here, the question of the authority of the arbitrator to issue an untimely award was implicitly submitted to the arbitrator. Because an arbitrator has no obligation to explain the basis of his decision,
see Enterprise Wheel,
The arbitrator’s implicit finding that he had the authority to issue an award after 60 days represents a plausible construction of the collective bargaining agreement. An arbitrator could quite reasonably have concluded that the time limit was precatory and did not limit his authority to issue an award after the 60 day period had run.
See West Rock Lodge,
In sum, the arbitrator’s award represents a plausible construction of the contract; he did not exceed his authority. The district court’s order entering summary judgment in favor of the union is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. McKesson also contends that the arbitrator was unfaithful to the contract because he interpreted the phrase "in light of’ the good cause requirements contained elsewhere in the contract despite the express provision in the contract that those good cause requirements were not applicable to the termination of an employee. However, the arbitrator does not appear to have applied the good cause requirements but rather appears only to have used them to divine the meaning of the disputed term. This was not improper,
see, e.g.,
Cal.Civ.Code § 1641 ("The whole of a contract is to be taken together so as to give effect to every part, if reasonable practicable, each clause helping to interpret the other.”), and does not serve as a basis for setting aside his award,
see Enterprise Wheel,
