I think the better question would be how to get these cities to have low murders like the cities below: Actually the cities in this first list have way more money/resources than the bottom 10 cities.
Big Cities With The Highest Murder Rates
St. Louis, Missouri 49.91
/Detroit, Michigan 43.52
New Orleans, Louisiana 38.75
/Baltimore, Maryland 33.84
Newark, New Jersey 33.32
Buffalo, New York 23.22
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 22.43
/Memphis, Tennessee 21.38
/Atlanta, Georgia 20.47
Cincinati, Ohio 20.16
FBI's Violent Crime Statistics For Every City In America
The Top 10 Poorest Cities in the Country
10. Lake Havasu City-Kingman, AZ
- Median household income: $37,674
- Median home value: $120,200
- Unemployment rate: 8.7%
- Poverty rate: 20.6%
9. Grants Pass, OR
- Median household income: $36,870
- Median home value: $213,100
- Unemployment rate: 8.2%
- Poverty rate: 19.6%
8. Sumter, SC
- Median household income: $36,633
- Median home value: $111,100
- Unemployment rate: 7.4%
- Poverty rate: 24.1%
7. Valdosta, GA
- Median household income: $36,340
- Median home value: $110,900
- Unemployment rate: 6.2%
- Poverty rate: 26.0%
6. Sebring, FL
- Median household income: $36,120
- Median home value: $80,800
- Unemployment rate: 7.8%
- Poverty rate: 18.1%
5. Goldsboro, NC
- Median household income: $35,966
- Median home value: $105,700
- Unemployment rate: 6.7%
- Poverty rate: 25.5%
4. Homosassa Springs, FL
- Median household income: $35,671
- Median home value: $116,300
- Unemployment rate: 7.6%
- Poverty rate: 21.2%
3. McAllen-Edinburg-Mission, TX
- Median household income: $34,801
- Median home value: $79,400
- Unemployment rate: 7.9%
- Poverty rate: 34.0%
2. Pine Bluff, AR
- Median household income: $33,838
- Median home value: $80,200
- Unemployment rate: 7.5%
- Poverty rate: 26.2%
1. Brownsville-Harlingen, TX
- Median household income: $32,093
- Median home value: $76,200
- Unemployment rate: 6.8%
- Poverty rate: 35.2%
The 25 Richest and Poorest American Cities
When you say these cities, do you mean the ones you are referring to in your post? If so...let's look at the geography of all those cities and look at the industries that built them up, and then left gaping holes in employment when they pulled out. All of those cities are relics of a post-industrial society.
Straight from BLS.gov
1 Omaha city, NE 5.0
2 Oklahoma City city, OK 5.6
3 Honolulu County/city, HI 6.0
4 Austin city, TX 6.2
5 Virginia Beach city, VA 6.5
6 Minneapolis city, MN 6.9
6 Tulsa city, OK 6.9
8 San Antonio city, TX 7.0
9 Albuquerque city, NM 7.3
10 Raleigh city, NC 7.5
11 Boston city, MA 7.6
12 Fort Worth city, TX 7.9
13 Houston city, TX 8.0
13 Seattle city, WA 8.0
15 Nashville-Davidson (consolidated) city, TN 8.2
16 Dallas city, TX 8.5
16 El Paso city, TX 8.5
18 Columbus city, OH 8.9
18 San Francisco County/city, CA 8.9
20 Charlotte city, NC 9.1
20 Denver County/city, CO 9.1
22 Portland city, OR 9.4
22 Washington city, DC 9.4
24 New York city, NY 9.5
24 Wichita city, KS 9.5
26 Colorado Springs city, CO 9.6
27 Mesa city, AZ 9.7
28 Kansas City city, MO 10.0
28 Louisville-Jefferson County (consolidated) city, KY 10.0
30 San Diego city, CA 10.3
31 Phoenix city, AZ 10.5
31 Tucson city, AZ 10.5
33 Indianapolis (consolidated) city, IN 10.6
33 Philadelphia County/city, PA 10.6
35 Cleveland city, OH 10.8
36 Memphis city, TN 10.9
36 Miami city, FL 10.9
38 Jacksonville city, FL 11.1
39 Baltimore city, MD 11.2
39 Chicago city, IL 11.2
41 Atlanta city, GA 11.3
42 San Jose city, CA 11.6
43 Milwaukee city, WI 11.9
44 Los Angeles city, CA 13.2
45 Oakland city, CA 13.3
45 Sacramento city, CA 13.3
47 Long Beach city, CA 13.6
48 Las Vegas city, NV 14.3
49 Fresno city, CA 18.0
50 Detroit city, MI 24.8
While that's not all of the cities listed, you can also look at the demographics by race and see if that correlates with the percentage of perpetrators. Crime generally is an economic problem, violent crime anyway.
You need to create both short term and long term fixes to the education and employment problems in those cities.
A lot of those cities have crumbling infrastructure. I would advise creating jobs fixing the roads, bridges, electrical grid, plumbing, everything from the top down to create jobs in the next 2-10 years. I would then work on revising the education system to train kids for the next generation jobs, not factory jobs, not manual labor jobs...most inner-city schools, in my experience as I am a product of both public and private, only prepare you for jobs that are outgoing and outsourcing.
If we continue at this rate, and quite honestly its already here, you are creating an America with great wealth and great poverty, with no in-between and no chance to ascend.
You need more than 350K.
I would come up with some creative solutions for 350K, but you are not solving the problem in any size city with 350K.