The Taxi and Limousine Commission wants to force Uber and Lyft cars to link directly into the agency’s databases so it can monitor them to make sure drivers are paying every cent they owe for congestion pricing, agency officials said Wednesday.

Several taxi drivers complained at a TLC hearing on Wednesday that while their vehicles are connected directly to the city, Uber and Lyft cars are not. They worry that the app companies will fudge the numbers so that their drivers don’t have to pay their share of congestion pricing.

“If the city doesn’t have control of the data, who is stopping Uber from saying they only have $10K in congestion fees?” said cabby Nicolae Hent. “If the city doesn’t have the same control of the app cars like they have for the yellow, they are not going to report what they collect, they are going to lie.”

TLC Commissioner Meera Joshi said officials are figuring out what kind of technology they can use to collect the data.

“It is something we are exploring because there is a benefit to having that real-time data from a policy perspective,” she said.

Some cabbies argued that Uber and Lyft will simply drop their prices enough to avoid prices going up for their customers.

Uber spokeswoman Alix Anfang insist the company will not do that.