Not the extreme swings one sees in the US but a good half of Canadian cities (and in every region of the country) are experiencing a significant urban resurgence. It's not limited to the big cities of Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver. Urban cores are filling in, people are moving there, retail is opening to service the increased population, and PT is being expanded/improved.
Some are further along than others but this is a nationwide phenomenon. Some of the most notable are Halifax, Moncton, Ottawa, Hamilton, KW, London, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton, Kelowna, Victoria. Others are set to follow although there are some small slow growing cities like Saguenay, Sudbury, and Thunder Bay that fall further and further behind.
It gives one reason for optimism when one sees a metro of 650,000 building rail. Kitchener-Waterloo is one of the smallest metros in North America with LRT. Their Ion LRT opened in 2019.
Kitchener-Waterloo's ION light rail system
https://www.urban-transport-magazine...ew-light-rail/