This is like being in Europe and worrying about having your city destroyed by a volcano in Hawaii.
Probably less so.
Increased vulcanism in Hawaii could cause or provoke worldwide effects that concern us all (though perhaps we should worry more about Yellowstone, on that front[1]). The
creation of a black hole might be a problem, but the discovery of one (already created) shouldn't have any additional effects[2].
In truth, even the sudden 'magical' transformation of the Sun into a stellar-mass black hole would not suck us into gravitational doom, as we'd still be orbiting the same mass at the same distance. Though we
would have a big problem with no longer having our usual dose of sunlight. Unless there was enough other new mass to feed it, no new increase in 'hard' radiation, so even that might end up less. Perhaps a wonderful opportunity to try to understand what Hawking Radiation might actually be (once we set aside who snapped their fingers to transform the Sun, in the first place, and dealt with the immediate issues of survival from the rapid cooling).
There are other subtle potential problems with extrasolar black holes, but a newly discovered (yet 'established') one at that distance (and not itself obviously heading this way, in any substantial manner) is more just an interesting thing to know about[3]. What I'd be more worried about is a more subtle one, not so large but perhaps actually travelling directly towards us (alone, so with no tell-tale glowing disc) still in a particularly empty/unstudied slot of sky (where any lensing hasn't yet been realised for what it is). And even that probably isn't as 'immediately' likely to cause us problems as a rogue planet/failed-brown-dwarf looming up out of the
cosmic-biege, which probably number far greater than 'stealth' black holes in our local neighbourhood.
(Though, of course, there's always a chance. Or "sufficiently advanced aliens" intervening. Or probably many other things that science just doesn't know about yet. And, of course, humorous (as well as humourless?) hyperbole.)
[1] Not sure about the potential Krakatoa-like issues of extremely ready seawater, though, on top of even a 'smaller' mega-eruption. Loads of variables there.
[2] There's black hole 'ejection flares', from a glut of accretion material being forced away from the rotational poles of the new material, but that's a rather aimed effect, and to be hit (eventually) by the maximum possible effects of one (over any interstellar distance) is extremely unlikely.
[3] Instead of "Second-biggest black hole in the Milky Way found", I would have said "Black hole is second-biggest found in the Milky Way", or similar. And, for scale, we're talking Sagittarius A* at ~4
million solar masses, this one at ~32, Cygnus X1 at ~15 and then other candidates at ~12 (but could be up to 26, from the manner of its discovery), ~11, ~10, ~9s, an ~8, ~7s, ~6s, a ~5, (no obvious ~4s), ~3s and ~2s, numbering to 20 examples. And Gaia BH3 is the second closest discovered (Gaia BH1 is at ¾ the distance, with a high 9-stellar-mass size). In truth, BHs are hard to find/pin down, unless they're quite close or
very large.
edit(s): I just couldn't get "Sagittarius" spelt correctly first(/second/third) time!