Adrienne Arsenault, Rosemary Barton, Andrew Chang and Ian Hanomansing (left to right) are named the new hosts of "The National," at a news conference in Toronto, Tuesday, Aug.1, 2017 Nathan Denette/Canadian Press

Arsenault, Barton, Chang and Hanomansing are the new hosts of ‘The National’ on CBC

CBC plans to air its flagship newscast live across all six time zones from studios in Vancouver, Ottawa and Toronto. Continue Reading Arsenault, Barton, Chang and Hanomansing are the new hosts of ‘The National’ on CBC

By The Canadian Press

Adrienne Arsenault, Rosemary Barton, Andrew Chang and Ian Hanomansing are the new hosts of “The National.”

The public broadcaster unveiled the new team Tuesday, signalling the first step towards reshaping the flagship news program.

Among the changes, the CBC now plans to air the newscast live across all six time zones from studios in Vancouver, Ottawa and Toronto.

By going live in each time zone, the hosts will be able to track developing stories in real time.

The CBC says the revamped show will build a more collaborative effort between the hosts, who will also continue to report their own stories.

“I’m not giving up my love of reporting,” Arsenault said. “I’m still going to be in the field, still reporting. We’re all still going to be doing what we normally do. It’s just a chance to push the storytelling skills and it has the bonus of coming with the added responsibility. I think we’re all very clear-eyed about the responsibility we have to Canadians.”

While Arsenault has travelled the world as the CBC’s foreign correspondent, she will be based in Toronto for the show and have the ability to pivot to international locations.

Barton, who’s known for her hard-hitting interviews on “Power & Politics,” will broadcast from Ottawa.

“The most exciting part for me is that I will now be able to take public policy issues and go into the field, go into the country and see if they’re working,” she said.

“And if they’re not working come back and ask decision-makers why they’re not working and if they want to fix them.”

Chang will anchor from the Vancouver studio while Hanomansing will move from Vancouver to Toronto.

The ability to rejig the program as news develops on the West Coast is “a big deal,” according to Chang.

“At 10 p.m., we’re going to be able to cover more ground, we’re going to be much more nimble as a newscast in a part of the country that is so journalistically important,” he said.

Peter Mansbridge stepped down from his role as anchor and chief correspondent in July after nearly three decades with the program.

The broadcaster also plans to retool the format of its nightly news broadcast when the show relaunches in the fall.

This story is reprinted with the permission of The Canadian Press.