Neal Elbaum is a Coldwell Banker real estate agent working in the Queens and Long Island areas.
Aug 11, 2014
Neal Elbaum is a Coldwell Banker real estate agent working in the Queens and Long Island areas.
Neal Elbaum is an experienced agent, having learned the trade from his fiancé’s grandfather, a 40 year
real estate veteran.
Neal learned that to truly find the perfect home for the clients, an agent needs to make a personal
connecGon with the client individually and also with the
community as a whole.
Neal treats each client with respect and the utmost aHenGon.
You aren’t just a way to make a commission when you are working
with Neal Elbaum.
He understands that buying or selling a house is a stressful ordeal and his hands-‐on approach caters to
clients.
Neal is commiHed to family values and an old fashioned perspecGve
when it comes to business.
But what else?
Neal Elbaum is not only passionate about his work.
Neal and his fiancé, Amy, are also commiHed to caring for animals and
combaOng animal abuse.
Neal and Amy have a passion for compassion, in that regard.
They volunteer at local animal shelters and spend Gme doing what
ever they can to help.
On a given day, they are giving back in several ways:
– Cleaning enclosures – Washing dogs – Taking dogs for walks – Helping find permanent homes
Neal uses his skills as a real estate agent in finding “forever homes” for
animals in need.
Being able to help a dog or cat find a safe, warm and loving home is a
joyous experience for Neal and Amy.
The shelters do their best, but at the end of the day, there are way to many dogs and cats needing care.
Neal and Amy give their Gme to high-‐kill shelters specifically.
GeOng more personal
Maggie, Neal and Amy’s rescue dog
Gix, the cat.
Helping find a home for an animal is one thing, but providing a home is
another thing enGrely.
Thats exactly what Neal and Amy did on two occasions.
They have adopted a cat and dog from a shelter they volunteer at.
The dog, Maggie, is an elderly animal, at 13 years old and had
grown deaf and blind.
Typically, a dog at such an advanced age would be euthanized because it
is not a good candidate for adopGon.
Combine that with the fact that Maggie had a severely infected eye and this dog was surely going to be
put down soon.
Neal and Amy couldn’t let that happen.
They brought Maggie into their home.
Within weeks, the eye had completely cleared up and Maggie is
acGng like a puppy again.
Neal and Amy are thrilled with the change they’ve seen in her and she is surely happy to have a safe, warm and loving home for her final years.
Explore this website for more info about Neal Elbaum, the ASPCA, and
how to combat animal abuse.