Mayor Eric Adams has been touting that crime numbers for the month of March are down.

“We're down in crime in the subway system, folks, for the first quarter. We're down. We're down 24% in March. We're down in February. Can we please stop saying we're up in crime in our subway system? We are not,” Adams said at a news briefing this week.

Nonetheless, subway safety has been on many New Yorkers' minds in the wake of a number of high-profile crimes underground.

NY1 asked followers on social media: "Do you feel safe riding the subway?"

Here are the results of the unofficial poll.

On X, nearly 54% voted "no" and more than 46% voted "yes."

On Instagram, 64% voted "no" and 36% voted "yes."

This comes amid a number of measures announced by the city and state that aim to enhance subway safety, including bag checks, platform barriers, firearm scanners and, most notably, deployment of more NYPD officers and the National Guard into the subway system.

Charlton D'souza, president and founder of Passengers United, and James Inniss, public safety organizer at New York Communities For Change, joined "The Rush Hour" on Thursday to weigh in on how "New York is Talking" about subway safety.

For more information on Passengers United, visit passengersunited.org.

For more information on New York Communities For Change, visit nycommunities.org.