The University of Hawai'i, in partnership with the University of Arizona and Lockheed Martin, will sustain operations of the UKIRT infrared telescope.

UPDATE November 4, 2014: Good news loves company, it seems: the University of California just announced it will revoke an earlier decision to pull funding from the Lick Observatory by 2018. Read more about the decision in University of California's press release.

In a hopeful turn of events, the University of Hawai’i has assumed ownership of the 35-year-old United Kingdom Infrared Telescope (UKIRT). One of the world’s leading infrared observatories, UKIRT will continue surveying nearby brown dwarfs, distant supermassive black holes, and everything in between.

Despite high productivity, UKIRT faced closure when UK’s Science and Technology Facilities Council pulled funding in 2012. A few months later, UKIRT director Gary Davis posted an Announcement of Opportunity, basically putting the world-class observatory up for sale.

“This process is completely unprecedented,” Davis told Sky & Telescope at the time. “I can think of telescopes that have been pensioned off because they are old or small or on poor sites, but this is the first time that a productive, world-leading telescope has been in this situation.

Unprecedented or not, it worked. Scientific operations will continue now that the University of Hawai’i supports the facility in partnership with the University of Arizona and Lockheed Martin Space Technology Advanced Research and Development Laboratories.

A similar turnabout seems to be in place for the 15-meter James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, which observes submillimeter-wavelength emission from cold dust and gas within the solar system and in distant galaxies. Also placed on the chopping block in 2012, its for-sale announcement came on June 21, 2013. The latest update says JCMT operations will transfer early next year to the University of Hawai’i, in partnership with the East Asian Core Observatories Association.

This news may cheer astronomers at a number of state-of-the-art observatories still facing closure. As funding funnels towards next-gen scopes such as ALMA, the European Extremely Large Telescope, the Thirty Meter Telescope, and the Square Kilometer Array, current observatories around the world are coming under budgetary fire.

The U.S. National Science Foundation announced in 2012 plans to divest from two radio telescopes, the Green Bank Telescope and the Very Long Baseline Array, as well as three optical telescopes from the Kitt Peak National Observatory. Though Green Bank received a $1 million boost from the West Virginia University, it will need more if it is to survive long-term. More recently, the University of California announced its intentions to stop funding the long-running Lick Observatory by 2018. The fate of all of these telescopes remains to be seen.

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