Our club layout had problems with older Atlas switches (circa 2000). they had thin wires that supplied power to the middle rails. However, we we had a derailment on these switches, sometimes those thin wires would burn out and result in a power gap to the middle rail. The best solution was to solder a connection beneath the rail, but the problem was that the section of rail (that you label as "gap in center rail") was composed of some metal that was difficult to solder to. As a result, we ended up drilling into the bottom of that rail to insert a screw to electrify the rail.
On the switches where we didn't want to pry up, we drilled a hole in the side of the rail (similar to what Steve Horvath suggests) to solder a wire jumper to the nearest powered center rail.
The newer Atlas switches have beefed up power jumpers compared to the old ones. Also, they have a non-conductive "roller helpers" in the middle of the switch between your two red lines for the middle rails. We ended up making our own wooden "roller helpers" for those earlier switches that didn't have them