There are two types of haloes that cause this problem. One is the already mentioned chromatic aberration. This can be dealt with with the tools in lens corrections. Second is more insidious and impossible to get rid of since it is caused by the way Lightroom generates the color range masks in the luminance sliders. This happens very typically around blue skies when you use the blue slider to darken the sky. You will get 1 pixel bright lines around the edges of objects against the blue sky. Probably Lightroom does not extend the mask for blue far enough. You can't fix this and has been noted many times. If this happens (and it always does with darkening blue skies strongly), the only solution you have is to use different software. I generally use the channel mixer in Photoshop in that case which does not have this issue because it is not based on masking. In some cases, you can use an adjustment brush in Lightroom combined with a luminance mask or color range mask. This works better than the luminance sliders but is not always possible. Auto masking generally creates very ugly haloes and I would not recommend using it for this purpose.
P.S. this has been slightly improved in Lightroom 7.3 with the new profile system. The new black and white profiles there appear to do a better job at this than before. Not perfect but I am seeing fewer of these artifacts.