NEW YORK (1010 WINS) -- Straphangers fed up with the city’s transit system don’t have much to complain about since the subways are getting better, according to the MTA.

“We are beginning to turn the corner,” Transit President Andy Byford boasted Monday at an MTA board meeting.

The MTA announced that crews have sealed over 2,000 ceiling leads, cleared 340 miles of drains and cleaned 285 miles of track.

But, riders aren’t buying it.

“No, absolutely not,” said one commuter from Brooklyn.

Transit officials said its vacuum trains hit every station, but have only managed to vacuum up less than half of the city’s total number of track millage.

“Politics, politics – you have to make it sound good for the people. That’s what it is,” another rider told 1010 WINS.

While some customers advocated for patience and insisted the system would improve over time, a Times Square station agent suggested cracking down on fare-beaters and using that money to fix the system.

Byford’s announcement comes roughly one week after the city’s Rider Alliance found there was only one day in August during which the trains ran without any signal delays.