If it feels like the subway is more crowded than ever, it's not your imagination.
New numbers from the MTA show overcrowding remains a major problem for the agency.
Weekday delays are up from a year ago.
The MTA says there were nearly 57,000 delays in March, with more than 22,000 blamed on overcrowding.
That's an increase of 5,000 delays compared to a year ago.
"Used to take me an hour to get to work. Now it takes me almost two hours," said one subway rider in Manhattan.
"Always late for work, always late getting somewhere, like an hour or 30 minutes late. It's just horrible," noted another subway rider.
"In the afternoon, it's crazy, my train commute goes up by 20 minutes," added a third straphanger.
In March of this year, riders waited longer for trains on every numbered line and on all lettered lines except for the F.
There was also big drop in the reliability of subway cars, especially the ones on the C and J lines that are more than 50 years old.
The MTA says those cars went only 38,000 miles between failures in March of this year.
But they had gone 58,000 miles between failures in March 2015.