About a third of New Yorkers believe race relations in the state are good or excellent, a steep decline from a decade ago when more than half of voters had a positive view of relations, a Siena College poll released on Monday found.

The poll found only five percent of New Yorkers think race relations in the state are excellent and 28 percent rate them good. Sixty-four percent say they are fair or poor.

The survey is being released as the country recognizes Martin Luther King Jr., Day.

Ten years ago, 51 percent of voters polled by Siena College had a positive view on race relations. Seventy-three percent of residents responded that racial minorities living in New York are facing discrimination, an increase from 68 percent in the last year.

And, as hate crimes increase, particularly against Jewish targets, 78 percent say religious minorities experience discrimination. Ninety-one percent of black voters agree that’s the case, as do 81 percent of Latino voters.

High-profile attacks have included the stabbing of five people in Rockland County, and Governor Andrew Cuomo has called for a new hate crime terrorism charge to be approved this year.

The poll found 35 percent of New Yorkers in the last year say they have been treated unfairly due to their race, religion, ethnicity, gender, or sexual orientation, a rise from 30 percent last year. At the time, the wording of the question did not include religion.

Meanwhile, nearly half of women polled, 45 percent, say they have been sexually harassed at some point in their lives, compared to 14 percent of men. Three-quarters of women and 69 percent of men in New York say workplace sexual harassment is a significant problem.

The poll of 814 registered voters was conducted from Jan. 11-16. It has a margin of error of 4.1 percentage points.