If you want to go from your staffing agency to perm employee with Daikin, it will take about a year. But you can keep applying until you are approved and try other better-paying contract jobs in the meantime after your first 90 days.
You can't call the office for help regardless of which client you work for. You can only get help on the client site, in person and when someone is available to help you. These HR reps work long rotating hours and I always see someone new because they move them from site to site. I hear them talk and they are clearly tired and overworked (12-15+ hr shifts), but a few of them are nice. Effex has a hidden HR office where they work in the back of the building and it's not easy to find. They are very helpful but often not available depending on who is there and what time of day/night you need help as their office is staffed 24/7 which is good since I can't call anyone for help except the auto attendance line. The same is true with the client.
You work Mon-Sat and you are off on Sunday at about 60 hours a week with unpaid lunches. It's a few months before you get paid holidays but you will get some holidays off regardless. You have no life. I'm sorry, but hey, like any assembly line job, sometimes your line is sent home an hour or more early. It's a mostly a rare occasion, but it's ok because you average about 60 hours a week as a Full-Time contractor or Daikin employee. (57 paid hours, unpaid lunches)
Give people more than 24 hrs notice on whether or not they will be working on Saturdays. They did improve in this area after a while. It appeared that middle and upper management were not communicating this info often or fast enough to allow more work/life balance for their contractors/employees. The turn over rate after 3 days of paid training is hilarious. There were 200 people when I started. I never saw any of them within my first week. The job itself is light to medium labor. It's not bad, but it is a warm environment and is hard repetitive work - it's an assembly line. That's it.