Get all the latest news on coronavirus and more delivered daily to your inbox. Sign up here

More than 250 homeless people were removed from New York City’s subway system after it was voluntarily shut down overnight for the first time in its history, Mayor Bill de Blasio says.

The system is now closing between the hours of 1 and 5 a.m. each night so transportation crews can disinfect trains to protect essential workers from the spread of the coronavirus.

CLICK HERE FOR FULL CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

"Last night, 139 homeless individuals out of 252 who were engaged by our outreach workers and by the NYPD officers especially trained in homeless outreach… agreed to accept support, accept service and come in off the streets,” De Blasio was quoted by the New York Post as saying Wednesday after the first series of cleanings.

“We’ve never seen so much success in a single night before.”

Of those who accepted support, 124 voluntarily went into shelters, 13 voluntarily went into hospitals and two received medical help after nurses determined they needed immediate care.

CUOMO SURPRISED MOST NY CORONAVIRUS HOSPITALIZATIONS ARE PEOPLE WHO STAYED AT HOME

However, one bus driver told the Post that several homeless people simply got on his vehicle when they left the subway.

“As soon as they boarded, they were already giving me a hard time,” Jason Felix, who operates in the Bronx, told the Post, adding that about 20 people, at least seven of whom were homeless, jumped onto his bus near the Pelham Bay 6 train terminal just after the 1 a.m. shutdown.

“It’s the most crowded I’ve seen it since March 5,” said Felix. “On my fourth stop, I smelled smoke. They were smoking on my bus.

CLICK HERE FOR THE FOX NEWS APP

“I said, ‘Whoever is smoking, get out.’ Nobody got out. They just stood there like, ‘Nah, I’m good.’”